Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 77 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
Laboratory for Atomistic and Molecular Mechanics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 33 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
Nanoscale. 2023 May 18;15(19):8578-8588. doi: 10.1039/d3nr01287e.
Dynamic noncovalent interactions are pivotal to the structure and function of biological proteins and have been used in bioinspired materials for similar roles. Metal-coordination bonds, in particular, are especially tunable and enable control over static and dynamic properties when incorporated into synthetic materials. Despite growing efforts to engineer metal-coordination bonds to produce strong, tough, and self-healing materials, the systematic characterization of the exact contribution of these bonds towards mechanical strength and the effect of geometric arrangements is missing, limiting the full design potential of these bonds. In this work, we engineer the cooperative rupture of metal-coordination bonds to increase the rupture strength of metal-coordinated peptide dimers. Utilizing all-atom steered molecular dynamics simulations on idealized bidentate histidine-Ni coordinated peptides, we show that histidine-Ni bonds can rupture cooperatively in groups of two to three bonds. We find that there is a strength limit, where adding additional coordination bonds does not contribute to the additional increase in the protein rupture strength, likely due to the highly heterogeneous rupture behavior exhibited by the coordination bonds. Further, we show that this coordination bond limit is also found natural metal-coordinated biological proteins. Using these insights, we quantitatively suggest how other proteins can be rationally designed with dynamic noncovalent interactions to exhibit cooperative bond breaking behavior. Altogether, this work provides a quantitative analysis of the cooperativity and intrinsic strength limit for metal-coordination bonds with the aim of advancing clear guiding molecular principles for the mechanical design of metal-coordinated materials.
动态非共价相互作用对生物蛋白质的结构和功能至关重要,并已在仿生材料中用于类似的作用。特别是金属配位键特别可调,当它们被整合到合成材料中时,可以控制静态和动态特性。尽管人们越来越努力地设计金属配位键以产生强韧和自修复材料,但对于这些键对机械强度的精确贡献以及几何排列的影响的系统表征却缺失了,这限制了这些键的全部设计潜力。在这项工作中,我们通过工程设计使金属配位键协同断裂,从而提高金属配位肽二聚体的断裂强度。我们利用理想化双齿组氨酸-Ni 配位肽的全原子引导分子动力学模拟,表明组氨酸-Ni 键可以成组地协同断裂,一次断裂两个或三个键。我们发现存在一个强度极限,其中添加额外的配位键不会导致蛋白质断裂强度的额外增加,这可能是由于配位键表现出高度不均匀的断裂行为。此外,我们还表明,这种配位键极限也存在于天然金属配位的生物蛋白质中。利用这些见解,我们定量地提出了其他蛋白质如何可以通过动态非共价相互作用进行合理设计,以表现出协同键断裂行为。总的来说,这项工作提供了对金属配位键的协同作用和固有强度极限的定量分析,旨在为金属配位材料的机械设计提供明确的指导分子原理。