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62Articular cartilage is a nonvascularized and poorly cellularized tissue with a low self-repair capacity. Therefore, damage to this tissue due to trauma or degenerative joint diseases such as osteoarthritis needs a high-end medical intervention. However, such interventions are costly, have limited healing capacity, and could impair patients' quality of life. In this regard, tissue engineering and three-dimensional (3D) bioprinting hold great potential. However, identifying suitable bioinks that are biocompatible, with the desired mechanical stiffness, and can be used under physiological conditions is still a challenge. In this study, we developed two tetrameric self-assembling ultrashort peptide bioinks that are chemically well-defined and can spontaneously form nanofibrous hydrogels under physiological conditions. The printability of the two ultrashort peptides was demonstrated; different shape constructs were printed with high shape fidelity and stability. Furthermore, the developed ultrashort peptide bioinks gave rise to constructs with different mechanical properties that could be used to guide stem cell differentiation toward specific lineages. Both ultrashort peptide bioinks demonstrated high biocompatibility and supported the chondrogenic differentiation of human mesenchymal stem cells. Additionally, the gene expression analysis of differentiated stem cells with the ultrashort peptide bioinks revealed articular cartilage extracellular matrix formation preference. Based on the different mechanical stiffness of the two ultrashort peptide bioinks, they can be used to fabricate cartilage tissue with different cartilaginous zones, including the articular and calcified cartilage zones, which are essential for engineered tissue integration.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.18063/ijb.719 | DOI Listing |
J Med Chem
August 2025
Department of Biosciences and Bioengineering, Indian Institute of Technology Guwahati, Guwahati 781039, Assam, India.
Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) are promising alternatives to traditional antibiotics. This study uses alchemical free energy simulations to design ultrashort, cationic, broad-spectrum membrane-active peptides. Previously, we identified broad-spectrum peptide P4 (LKWLKKL-NH, charge +4) with moderate activity (10-50 μM) but it was ineffective against Methicillin-resistant (MRSA).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInjectable hydrogels are promising candidates as local drug delivery platforms for the treatment of infected wounds. Self-assembled small peptide hydrogels are of interest due to their high biocompatibility, degradability, and ease of synthesis. This study describes the formation of an injectable hydrogel based on the self-assembly of Fmoc-FFpY (Fmoc: fluorenylmethoxycarbonyl, F: phenylalanine, pY: tyrosine phosphate) triggered by electrostatic interactions in the presence of Fe ions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGels
May 2025
Department of Molecular Medicine and Medical Biotechnologies, University of Naples Federico II, Via S. Pansini 5, 80131 Naples, Italy.
This study reports the development of peptide-based hydrogels for the encapsulation and controlled release of peptide nucleic acids in drug delivery applications. Ultrashort aromatic peptides, such as Fmoc-FF, self-assemble into biocompatible hydrogels with nanostructured architectures. The functionalization of tripeptides (Fmoc-FFK and Fmoc-FFC) with lysine (K) or cysteine (C) enables electrostatic or covalent interactions with model PNAs engineered with glutamic acid or cysteine residues, respectively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Chem Soc
May 2025
Institut Européen des Membranes, Adaptive Supramolecular Nanosystems Group, ENSCM-CNRS, UMR5635, University of Montpellier, Place E. Bataillon CC047, 34095 Montpellier, France.
Transmembrane selective transport of metabolites controls essential biological functions. During the last two decades, artificial channels have been developed and cyclic peptides have emerged as ideal platforms for efficient ion, sugar, and nucleic acid channel translocation. Despite these tremendous developments, cyclic peptides have eluded selective water transport.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Protein Pept Sci
April 2025
Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, School of Pharmaceutical Education and Research (SPER), Jamia Hamdard (Deemed to be University), New Delhi 110062, India.
Introduction/objectives: Silver nanoparticles [AgNPs] are promising antimicrobial agents, but their synthesis often involves toxic reducing agents. To address this, we developed a green synthesis methodology employing an in-situ approach for synthesizing AgNPs within self- -assembled ultrashort peptide hydrogels through photochemical synthesis, eliminating the need for toxic chemicals.
Methods: A novel tetrapeptide was designed and synthesized to form hydrogels in aqueous solutions.