What is it about?
Peptide nanotubes are a topical subject with implications for developing new biomedical materials in the field of the so-called bionanotechnology.
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Why is it important?
The self-assembly of peptide nanotubes formed by an L-glutamic acid-based bolaamphiphile is shown to proceed via a remarkable mechanism where the peptide conformation changes from β-sheet to unordered. The kinetics of this process are elucidated via X-ray scattering and UV circular dichroism methods. The reverse transition from “unordered” to β-sheet structures is triggered by UV radiation.
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This page is a summary of: Self-assembly pathway of peptide nanotubes formed by a glutamatic acid-based bolaamphiphile, Chemical Communications, January 2015, Royal Society of Chemistry,
DOI: 10.1039/c5cc03640b.
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