Self-Assembling Aromatic Peptide Amphiphile Fibers for Multivalent Display of Enzymatically Linked Antigenic Proteins

28 May 2025, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Supramolecular fibers assembled from peptide amphiphiles are promising materials for the delivery of biopharmaceuticals. However, strategies for directly conjugating folded proteins onto these supramolecular dynamic assemblies remain limited. Herein, we demonstrate that aromatic peptide amphiphiles that integrate self-assembly motifs with enzymatic recognition sequences enable the synthesis of supramolecular fibrous materials amenable to protein conjugation in their native folded state. The designed peptide amphiphiles self-assembled into fibers through a combination of hydrophobic, aromatic and hydrogen bonding interactions in aqueous media. Using microbial transglutaminase, a recombinant enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP), used as a model proteinaceous antigen, was covalently coupled to the fibers via site-specific enzymatic cross-linking. This direct conjugation greatly enhanced the intracellular delivery of EGFP to murine dendritic cells in a man-ner dependent upon the peptide design. Notably, the resulting conjugates exhibited markedly increased immunogenicity compared to the protein alone, as evidenced by the elevated production of antigen-specific immunoglobulin G. These find-ings position the conjugated supramolecular fibers as a versatile platform for protein delivery and vaccine development.

Keywords

peptide amphiphiles
self-assembly
enzymatic reaction
intracellular protein delivery
immune material

Supplementary materials

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Supplementary data
Description
Characterization of Pyr-LnQG, critical aggregation concentra-tion measurement, fluorescence and FT-IR spectra, TEM images of peptide fibers after the conjugation of Ktag-EGFP, in vitro delivery of Ktag-EGFP, Pyr-LnQG cytotoxicity, inhibition of energy-dependent internalization of Ktag-EGFP, and subclass analysis of IgG produced in immunized mice.
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