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Biomaterials

Soft materials form surprising superstructures

Tunable hydrogel controls state of neural cells in culture

by Celia Henry Arnaud
October 4, 2018 | A version of this story appeared in Volume 96, Issue 40

 

Model of fiber bundle shown as long strands with DNA on the surface holding them together.
Credit: Science
Peptides (red and gray) assemble into hydrogels (pink and blue). The attached DNA (red and blue helices) on some peptides helps form superstructures.

To mimic natural protein assemblies, Samuel I. Stupp and coworkers at Northwestern University set out to make a hydrogel that could undergo reversible changes in stiffness. They succeeded using peptide nanofibers—some with DNA attached. But the structures didn’t look quite as expected.

To the naked eye, the gels looked like normal hydrogels, but when the researchers imaged them with scanning electron microscopy, they found that instead of the normal meshlike fiber configuration, the gels consisted of long and thick bundles of fibers—superstructures—embedded in a matrix of individual fibers (Science 2018, DOI: 10.1126/science.aat6141). The self-assembly is reversible and controllable with the addition of other DNA strands.

Scanning electron micrograph of a hydrogel containing long, fiberlike superstructures in a matrix of individual fibers.
Credit: Science
Scanning electron microscopy reveals the hydrogels’ superstructures (purple) amid a nest of protein fibers.

The DNA-containing molecules start out randomly distributed throughout all the fibers, but eventually they concentrate in the superstructures. “A critical part is the dynamic nature of the system,” Stupp says. Molecules can exit from their original fiber and reorganize into the superstructures.

To understand the assembly mechanism, Stupp enlisted Northwestern colleague Erik Luijten, whose team ran monomer-level simulations. “The modeling predicted that molecules capable of strong interactions, even without DNA, could yield the same superstructures,” Luijten says. To test that, the researchers designed a second set of peptides that were held together by electrostatic interactions and formed similarly reversible superstructures. “In principle, any chemistry will be possible,” even inorganic systems, if conditions are right, Stupp says.

Stupp’s team used the hydrogels as artificial extracellular matrices to culture brain cells. When stiff superstructures formed, the cells switched from a healthy state to one that occurs during injury or neurological disease. The cells reverted to a healthy state when the rigid bundles went away. “We showed that the superstructure itself causes these changes in the cells,” Stupp says.

Ian Manners, an expert on supramolecular chemistry at the University of Bristol, says the work represents “important breakthroughs in the area of functional self-assembled materials.”

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