Self‐assembly of a conjugate of lipoic acid with a collagen‐stimulating pentapeptide showing cytocompatibility and wound healing properties, and chemical and photolytic disassembly
de Mello, L. R., Castelletto, V., Cavalcanti, L., Seitsonen, J. and Hamley, I. W.
It is advisable to refer to the publisher's version if you intend to cite from this work. See Guidance on citing. To link to this item DOI: 10.1002/psc.70002 Abstract/SummaryLipoic acid is a biocompatible compound with antioxidant activity that is of considerable interest in cosmetic formulations, and the disulfide group in the N-terminal ring confers redox activity. Here, we study the self-assembly and aspects of the bioactivity of a lipopeptide (peptide amphiphile) comprising the KTTKS collagen-stimulating pentapeptide sequence conjugated to an N-terminal lipoic acid chain, lipoyl-KTTKS. Using SAXS, SANS and cryo-TEM, lipoyl-KTTKS is found to form a population of curly fibrils (wormlike micelles) above a critical aggregation concentration. Upon chemical reduction, the fibrils (and β-sheet structure) are disrupted because of the breaking of the disulfide bond, which produces dihydrolipoic acid. Lipoyl-KTTKS also undergoes photo-degradation in the presence of UV radiation. Through cell assays using fibroblasts, we found that lipoyl-KTTKS has excellent cytocompatibility across a wide concentration range, stimulates collagen production, and enhances the rate of cell coverage in a simple in vitro scratch assay of ‘wound healing’. Lipoyl-KTTKS thus has several notable properties that may be useful for the development of cosmetics, cell scaffolds or tissue engineering materials.
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