Peptide nanonets offer a promising avenue for constructing anti-infective biomaterials. Our group recently reported innovative designs of synthetic BTT nanonets that fibrillate selectively in response to bacterial endotoxins. Herein, we delved deeper into the molecular interactions between our peptides and these bacteria-specific biomolecules, which is an aspect critically missing from major works in the field. Using microscopic and biophysical techniques, we identified phosphate moieties in endotoxins as being the most essential to the initiation of peptide fibrillation. This was strongly supported by molecular dynamics simulations in an outer membrane environment with variable states of phosphorylation. To support the claim over bacterial specificity, we demonstrated a lack of nanonet formation in the presence of various phosphate-containing biomolecules native to human biology. The structural importance of phosphate moieties among pathogenic strains strongly indicates a wide clinical spectrum of our peptides, which was experimentally verified.
Keywords: antibiotic resistance; antimicrobial peptide; bacterial specificity; broad spectrum; nanonets; self-assembly.