Artificial molecular pumps (AMPs), inspired by the active cellular transport exhibited in biological systems, enable cargoes to undergo unidirectional motion, courtesy of molecular ratchet mechanisms in the presence of energy sources. Significant progress has been achieved, using alternatively radical interactions and Coulombic repulsive forces to create working AMPs. In an attempt to widen the range of these AMPs, we have explored the effect of molecular pumping on the photophysical properties of a collecting chain on a dumbbell incorporating a centrally located pyrene fluorophore and two terminal pumping cassettes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe digital revolution sets a milestone in the progressive miniaturization of working devices and in the underlying advent of molecular machines. Foldamers involving mechanically entangled components with modular secondary structures are among the most promising designs for molecular switch-based applications. Characterizing the nature and dynamics of their intramolecular network following the application of a stimulus is the key to their performance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report on the use of atomic force microscopy (AFM) to identify and characterize an intermediate state in macrocycle shuttling in a hydrogen bonded amide-based molecular shuttle. The [2]rotaxane consists of a benzylic amide macrocycle mechanically locked onto a thread that bears both fumaramide and succinic amide-ester sites, each of which can bind to the macrocycle through up to four intercomponent hydrogen bonds. Using AFM-based single-molecule force spectroscopy, we mechanically triggered the translocation of the ring between the two principal binding sites ("stations") on the axle.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDonor-acceptor (DA) π-interactions are weak attractive forces that are exploited widely in molecular and supramolecular chemistry. They have been characterized extensively by ensemble techniques, providing values for their energies that are useful for the design of soft materials. For implementation of motions or operations based on these DA π-interactions in wholly synthetic molecular machines, the mechanical strength and force associated with their out-of-equilibrium performance are the key parameters, in addition to their energies obtained at thermodynamic equilibrium.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMussel wet adhesion is known for its outstanding strength on a variety of surfaces. On the basis of the hypothesis that 3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine, a catecholic amino acid, governs mussel adhesion, chemists have put much effort into the design of adhesive synthetic polymers containing catechols. However, the exceptional properties exhibited by the native proteins were hardly captured.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFα-Helix is the most predominant secondary structure in proteins and supports many functions in biological machineries. The conformation of the helix is dictated by many factors such as its primary sequence, intramolecular interactions, or the effect of the close environment. Several computational studies have proposed that there is a critical maximum length for the formation of intact compact helical structures, supporting the fact that most intact α-helices in proteins are constituted of a small number of amino acids.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFolding is a ubiquitous process that nature uses to control the conformations of its molecular machines, allowing them to perform chemical and mechanical tasks. Over the years, chemists have synthesized foldamers that adopt well-defined and stable folded architectures, mimicking the control expressed by natural systems . Mechanically interlocked molecules, such as rotaxanes and catenanes, are prototypical molecular machines that enable the controlled movement and positioning of their component parts .
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
September 2018
Wholly synthetic molecules involving both mechanical bonds and a folded secondary structure are one of the most promising architectures for the design of functional molecular machines with unprecedented properties. Here, we report dynamic single-molecule force spectroscopy experiments that explore the energetic details of donor-acceptor oligorotaxane foldamers, a class of molecular switches. The mechanical breaking of the donor-acceptor interactions responsible for the folded structure shows a high constant rupture force over a broad range of loading rates, covering three orders of magnitude.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAt the interface between foldamers and mechanically interlocked molecules, oligorotaxanes exhibit a spring-like folded secondary structure with remarkable mechanical and physicochemical properties. Among these properties, the ability of oligorotaxanes to act as molecular switches through controlled modulations of their spatial extension over (un)folding dynamics is of particular interest. The present study aims to assess and further characterize this remarkable feature in the gas phase using mass spectrometry tools.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe force-driven separation of double-stranded DNA is crucial to the accomplishment of cellular processes like genome transactions. Ligands binding to short DNA sequences can have a local stabilizing or destabilizing effect and thus severely affect these processes. Although the design of ligands that bind to specific sequences is a field of intense research with promising biomedical applications, so far, their effect on the force-induced strand separation has remained elusive.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAddressing the effect of different environmental factors on the adsorption of DNA to solid supports is critical for the development of robust miniaturized devices for applications ranging from biosensors to next generation molecular technology. Most of the time, thiol-based chemistry is used to anchor DNA on gold - a substrate commonly used in nanotechnology - and little is known about the direct interaction between DNA and gold. So far there have been no systematic studies on the direct adsorption behavior of the deoxyribonucleotides (i.
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