Specific and non-specific interactions of fibronectin with zwitterionic peptoid brushes studied by molecular dynamics simulation
Cheung, David L. and Messersmith, Phillip B. and Lau, King Hang Aaron (2025) Specific and non-specific interactions of fibronectin with zwitterionic peptoid brushes studied by molecular dynamics simulation. Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics, 27 (46). pp. 25116-25126. ISSN 1463-9084 (https://doi.org/10.1039/D5CP02324F)
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Abstract
Zwitterionic polymer brushes represent a prominent class of surfaces to prevent non-specific protein interactions. However, residual protein binding and cell attachment can still be observed. Peptide-mimetic “peptoids” constitute a versatile sequence-specific platform for developing specific protein binding motifs as well as antifouling brushes. Nonetheless, molecular level insight into their protein interactions is generally lacking. Using atomistic molecular dynamics (MD) simulation, we analyse the interactions of fibronectin type-III (FnIII) 9- and 10-domains with a zwitterionic peptoid brush and compare it with polysarcosine, the well-known and uncharged elementary peptoid and potential PEG replacement. Experimental protein adsorption trends are used to determine the peptoid chain densities simulated. For each combination of peptoid and chain density, 9 independent simulations with different starting protein orientations are performed. The simulation results are consistent with experimental measurements over different chain densities, and they identified FnIII 9-10regions and specific amino acids with typical involvement in interactions with polysarcosine and the zwitterionic variant. Moreover, stronger interactions are seen for the zwitterionic peptoid design, and the protein's integrin binding motifs face away from the surface, nearly opposite in direction to the sequence segments interacting with the peptoids. These observations give new insight into protein–peptoid interactions and suggest the possibility of designing peptoid sequences for presenting cell-binding protein motifs and mediating cell attachment.
ORCID iDs
Cheung, David L., Messersmith, Phillip B. and Lau, King Hang Aaron
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3676-9228;
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Item type: Article ID code: 94676 Dates: DateEvent30 November 2025Published5 November 2025Published Online27 October 2025AcceptedSubjects: Science > Chemistry > Physical and theoretical chemistry Department: Faculty of Science > Pure and Applied Chemistry Depositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 07 Nov 2025 13:14 Last modified: 12 Feb 2026 18:38 Related URLs: URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/94676
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