RESUMO
Mucus is an essential barrier material that separates organisms from the outside world. This slippery material regulates the transport of nutrients, drugs, gases, and pathogens toward the cell surface. The surface of the cell itself is coated in a mucus-like barrier of glycoproteins and glycolipids. Mucin glycoproteins are the primary component of mucus and the epithelial glycocalyx. Aberrant mucin production is implicated in diverse disease states from cancer and inflammation to pre-term birth and infection. Biological mucins are inherently heterogenous in structure, which has challenged understanding their molecular functions as a barrier and as biochemically active proteins. Therefore, many synthetic materials have been developed as artificial mucins with precisely tunable structures. This review highlights advances in design and synthesis of artificial mucins and their application in biomedical studies of mucin chemistry, biology, and physics.
RESUMO
Polyproline (PP) based polypeptides have broad applications as protein mimics, ordered materials, hydrogels, and surface coatings. However, a lack of rapid and efficient preparatory methods has challenged synthesis of well-defined high molecular weight materials. Here, we report facile and high-yielding methods for preparation and polymerization of Pro and trans-4-acetoxy-Pro N-carboxyanhdrides (NCAs). For decades, transition metal initiators of NCA polymerization were assumed to be nonstarters with Pro due to the lack of an amide NH proton. We carefully considered the known steps in the initiation mechanism and applied a Ni initiator that intercepts an intermediate and does not require an NH group. This initiator efficiently catalyzes controlled, living polymerization of Pro NCAs, revealing that routes alternate to the previously proposed mechanism must be at play. We also found Co species can catalyze Pro NCA polymerization, and we improved the synthetic methods to prepare the NCA monomers. Our methods are high-yielding and rapid and give tunable, end-functional PP-based homo, statistical, and block polypeptides. We characterized the conformation of PP and trans-4-hydroxy-PP by CD and confirmed the time scale for quantitative conversion from PPI to PPII helices. Overall, our data shed light on the general propagation mechanism of transition metal catalyzed NCA polymerization and have opened the door for efficient preparation of a desirable class of biomaterials.
RESUMO
Polyproline is a material of great interest in biomedicine due to its helical scaffold of structural importance in collagen and mucins and its ability to gel and to change conformations in response to temperature. Appending of function-modulating chemical groups to such a material is desirable to diversify potential applications. Here, we describe the synthesis of high-molecular-weight homo, block, and statistical polymers of azide-functionalized proline. The azide groups served as moieties for highly efficient click-grafting, as stabilizers of the polyproline PPII helix, and as modulators of thermoresponsiveness. Saccharides and ethylene glycol were utilized to explore small-molecule grafting, and glutamate polymers were utilized to form polyelectrolyte bottlebrush architectures. Secondary structure effects of both the azide and click modifications, as well as lower critical solution temperature behavior, were characterized. The polyazidoprolines and click products were well tolerated by live human cells and are expected to find use in diverse biomedical applications.