Abstract:
Bacterial infections pose a serious threat to mankind, and there is
immense interest in the design and development of self-assembled peptide gels
using ultrashort peptides for antibacterial applications. The peptide gels containing
natural amino acids suffer from poor stability against proteolytic enzymes.
Therefore, there is a need to design and develop peptide gels with improved
stability against proteolytic enzymes. In the present work, we report the synthesis
and characterization of α/γ hybrid peptides Boc-D-Phe-γ4
-L-Phe-PEA (NH007)
and Boc-L-Phe-γ4
-L-Phe-PEA (NH009) to improve the proteolytic stability. Both
of the dipeptides were found to self-assemble into gels in aqueous DMSO (3−5%
w/v), and the self-assembly process was studied using FTIR and CD, which
indicated antiparallel β-sheet formation with random coils in NH007 gels and
random or unordered conformation in NH009. The rheological studies indicated
viscoelastic characteristics for both gels; the storage modulus (G′) for NH007 and
NH009 gels (3% w/v) was estimated as 0.2 and 0.5 MPa, higher than the loss
modulus (G′′). Also, both gels demonstrated self-healing characteristics for six consecutive cycles when subjected to varying
strains of 0.1 and 30% (200 s each). The peptide gels were incubated with a mocktail of proteolytic enzymes, proteinase K,
pepsin, and chymotrypsin, and stability was monitored using RP HPLC. Up to 23 and 40% degradation was observed for NH007
(3%, w/v) in 24 and 36 h, and 77 and 94% degradation was observed for NH009 (3%, w/v), within the same period. Thus α/γ
hybrid peptide gels containing D-Phe exhibited higher stability than gels fabricated using L-Phe. The use of D-residue in α/γ
hybrid peptide significantly enhanced the stability of peptides against proteolytic enzymes, as the stability data reported in this
work are possibly the best in class. Both peptide gels exhibited broad-spectrum antibacterial activity against Gram-negative and
Gram-positive bacteria, such as Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Bacillus subtilis, and Staphylococcus aureus. The
Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Staphylococcus aureus, in particular, are known to develop resistance. The NH007 (3%, w/v)
demonstrated 65% inhibition, whereas NH009 (3%, w/v) showed 78% inhibition, with potent activity against Pseudomonas
aeruginosa. Mechanistic studies, using SEM, HR-TEM, and bacterial live−dead assay, indicated entrapment of bacteria in gel
networks, followed by interaction with cell membrane components and lysis. Cell viability (MTT assay) and toxicity (LDH
assay) studies showed that both gels are not toxic to NIH 3T3 mouse embryonic fibroblast cells (mammalian). MTT assay
showed >85% cell viability, and LDH assay exhibited not more than 15% cytotoxicity, even at higher concentrations (5%, w/v)
and prolonged exposures (48 h). Overall, studies indicate the potential application of gels developed from the α/γ hybrid
peptides in preventing biomaterial-related infections.