M. Kogiso et al., DICARBOXYLIC OLIGOPEPTIDE BOLAAMPHIPHILES - PROTON-TRIGGERED SELF-ASSEMBLY OF MICROTUBES WITH LOOSE SOLID-SURFACES, Langmuir, 14(18), 1998, pp. 4978-4986
A new family of oligopeptide-based bolaamphiphiles, glycylglycine- (1a
-h), glycylglycylglycine- (2a-b), sarcosylsarcosine- (3), L-prolyl-L-p
roline- (4), glycylsarcosylsarcosine- (5), and glycyl-L-prolyl-L-proli
ne (6)-based bolaamphiphiles with a dicarboxylic headgroup at each end
, has been synthesized. The oligopeptide fragments were linked via ami
de bond to a long-chain alpha,omega-dicarboxylic acid as a hydrocarbon
spacer. Self-assembling properties of these bolaamphiphiles in water
have been studied by light and cryogenic temperature transmission elec
tron microscopy, infrared spectroscopy, and pH titration. Only sodium
or potassium salts (acid soap) of the bolaamphiphiles 1a, 1c, 1e, 2a,
and 2b produced well-defined microtubes of 1-3-mu m diameter with clos
ed ends. All the tubes encapsulated a number of vesicular assemblies i
nside the aqueous compartment. The tube formation strongly depends on
the connecting alkylene chain length, the alkylene even-odd carbon num
bers, and constituent amino acid residues. Vectorial formation of acid
-anion dimers and loose interpeptide hydrogen-bond networks are respon
sible for the microtube self-assembly. The atomic force microscopic ob
servation of the microtube made of 1e revealed a distorted hexagonal a
rrangement of the headgroups on the surface. A self-assembling model a
nd the tube formation mechanism are also discussed from the viewpoint
of proton-triggered self-assembly.