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      Self-assembled hydrophobic Ala-Aib peptide encapsulating curcumin: a convenient system for water insoluble drugs†

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          Abstract

          The exploitation of self-assembled systems to improve the solubility of drugs is getting more and more attention. Among the different types of self-assembled biomaterials, peptides and in particular peptides containing non-coded amino acids (NCAPs) are promising because their use opens the door to more stable materials inducing increased stability to proteolysis. New classes of NCAP, Ac-Ala-X-Ala-Aib-AlaCONH 2 (X = alpha-aminoisobutyric acid (Aib) or X = cyclopentane amino acid (Ac5c)) have been prepared and the correlation between the different secondary peptide structure and solvent ( i.e. CD 3CN, CD 3OH, H 2O/D 2O) verified by NMR. Furthermore, the formation of a nanocolloidal system in water was deeply studied by DLS and the morphology of the obtained spherical aggregates with nanometric dimensions was assessed by TEM. Aib containing pentapeptide was selected for greater ease of synthesis. Its ability to encapsulate curcumin, as a model insoluble drug molecule, was investigated using fluorescence emission and confocal microscopy analyses. Two different approaches were used to study the interaction between curcumin and peptide aggregates. In the first approach peptide aggregates were formed in the presence of curcumin, while in the second approach curcumin was added to the already formed peptide aggregates. We succeeded in our challenge by using the second approach and 53.8% of added curcumin had been encapsulated.

          Abstract

          Short peptides containing non-coded amino acid encapsulate insoluble drug molecules.

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          NMR of proteins and nucleic acids

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            NMR of proteins and nucleic acids.

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              Author and article information

              Journal
              RSC Adv
              RSC Adv
              RA
              RSCACL
              RSC Advances
              The Royal Society of Chemistry
              2046-2069
              9 March 2020
              6 March 2020
              9 March 2020
              : 10
              : 17
              : 9964-9975
              Affiliations
              [a] Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, General and Organic Chemistry Section “A. Marchesini”, University of Milan Via Venezian 21 20133 Milano Italy francesca.clerici@ 123456unimi.it
              [b] CIMAINA, Interdisciplinary Center for Nanostructured Materials and Interfaces, Department of Physics Via Celoria 16 20133 Milano Italy
              [c] School of Chemistry, University of Manchester Manchester M13 9PL UK
              [d] Department of Chemistry, Università Degli Studi di Milano Via Golgi 19 20133 Milano Italy
              [e] Institute of Chemical Sciences and Technologies “Giulio Natta”, Italian National Research Council, CNR-SCITEC Via Golgi 19 20133 Milano Italy
              Author information
              https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1385-7137
              https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8617-2548
              https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5201-4824
              https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4909-651X
              https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0743-5499
              https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3483-5914
              Article
              c9ra10981a
              10.1039/c9ra10981a
              9050355
              35498617
              5a490fb2-f6c5-45a3-98c2-7f3b48d07315
              This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry
              History
              : 28 December 2019
              : 3 March 2020
              Page count
              Pages: 12
              Categories
              Chemistry
              Custom metadata
              Paginated Article

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