Literature DB >> 26222543

Design and Synthesis of Nonequilibrium Systems.

Chuyang Cheng1, Paul R McGonigal1,2, J Fraser Stoddart1, R Dean Astumian3.   

Abstract

The active transport of ions and molecules across cell membranes is essential to creating the concentration gradients that sustain life in all living organisms, be they bacteria, fungi, plants, animals or Homo sapiens. Nature uses active transport everywhere for everything. Molecular biologists have long been attracted to the study of active transport and continue to this day to investigate and elucidate the tertiary structures of the complex motor proteins that sustain it, while physicists, interested in nonequilibrium statistical mechanics, have developed theoretical models to describe the driven ratcheting motions that are crucial to its function. The increasingly detailed understanding that contemporary science has acquired relating to active transport, however, has yet to lead to the design and construction of artificial molecular motors capable of employing ratchet-driven motions that can also perform work against concentration gradients. Mechanically interlocked molecules (MIMs) in the form of pseudo- and semirotaxanes are showing some encouraging signs in meeting these goals. This review summarizes recent progress in making artificial molecular motors that can perform work by "pumping" tetracationic rings into high-energy states. The launching pad is a bistable [2]rotaxane whose dumbbell component contains two electron-donating recognition sites, one, a tetrathiafulvalene (TTF) unit, which interacts more strongly with the ring component, cyclobis(paraquat-p-phenylene) (CBPQT(4+)), containing two electron-accepting bipyridinium units, than does the other 1,5-dioxynaphthalene (DNP) unit. Switching can be induced electrochemically by oxidizing the TTF unit to a TTF(•+) radical cation, whereupon Coulombic repulsion takes care of moving the ring to the DNP unit. Reduction of the radical cation resets the switch. Molecular switches operate at, or close to, equilibrium. Any work done during one switching event is undone during the reset. Molecular motors, on the other hand, rely on a flux of energy, and a ratchet mechanism to make periodic changes to the potential energy surface of a system in order to move molecules uphill to higher energy states. Forging a path from molecular switches to motors involved designing a molecular pump prototype. An asymmetric dumbbell with a 2-isopropylphenyl (neutral) end and a 3,5-dimethylpyridinium (charged) end with a DNP recognition site to entice CBPQT(4+) rings out of solution exhibits relative unidirectional movement of the rings with respect to the dumbbell. Redox chemistry does the trick. During the oxidative cycle, the rings enter the dumbbell by passing over the neutral end onto the recognition site; in the reduction cycle, much of the recognition is lost and the rings find their way back into solution by leaving the dumbbell from the charged end. This on-one-end, off-the-other process can be repeated over and over again using light as the energy source in the presence of a photosensitizer and a compound that shuttles electrons back and forth. Although this prototype demonstrates ratchet-driven translational motion, no work is done. A ring enters the dumbbell from one end and leaves from the other end. Another deficiency of the prototype is the fact that, although the recognition site is muted on reduction, it retains some attraction for the ring. What if the recognition site was attractive initially and then became repulsive? This question was answered by turning to radical chemistry and employing the known stabilization behavior of a bipyridinium radical cation and the bisradical dication, generated on reduction of the CBPQT(4+) ring, to pluck rings out of solution and thread them over the charged end of the pump portion of a semidumbbell. On subsequent oxidation, the pump is primed and the rings pass through a one-way door, given a little thermal energy, onto a collecting-chain where they find themselves accumulating where they would rather not be present. In this manner, an artificial molecular pump mimics the pumping machinery commonplace in biological systems. Looking beyond this state-of-the-art artificial molecular pump, we discuss, from a theoretical standpoint, the measures that would need to be taken in order to render its operation autonomous.

Entities:  

Keywords:  active transport; co-conformations; dissipative systems; mechanostereochemistry; molecular motors; pseudorotaxanes; radicals; ratchet mechanism; rotaxanes

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26222543     DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.5b03809

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  ACS Nano        ISSN: 1936-0851            Impact factor:   15.881


  21 in total

1.  A Redox Strategy for Light-Driven, Out-of-Equilibrium Isomerizations and Application to Catalytic C-C Bond Cleavage Reactions.

Authors:  Eisuke Ota; Huaiju Wang; Nils Lennart Frye; Robert R Knowles
Journal:  J Am Chem Soc       Date:  2019-01-15       Impact factor: 15.419

2.  An autonomous chemically fuelled small-molecule motor.

Authors:  Miriam R Wilson; Jordi Solà; Armando Carlone; Stephen M Goldup; Nathalie Lebrasseur; David A Leigh
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2016-06-09       Impact factor: 49.962

3.  Dual-light control of nanomachines that integrate motor and modulator subunits.

Authors:  Justin T Foy; Quan Li; Antoine Goujon; Jean-Rémy Colard-Itté; Gad Fuks; Emilie Moulin; Olivier Schiffmann; Damien Dattler; Daniel P Funeriu; Nicolas Giuseppone
Journal:  Nat Nanotechnol       Date:  2017-03-20       Impact factor: 39.213

4.  Artificial molecular motors: Running on information.

Authors:  R Dean Astumian
Journal:  Nat Nanotechnol       Date:  2016-06-13       Impact factor: 39.213

5.  Stochastically pumped adaptation and directional motion of molecular machines.

Authors:  R Dean Astumian
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2018-03-09       Impact factor: 11.205

6.  Nanoscale Ion Pump Derived from a Biological Water Channel.

Authors:  Karl Decker; Martin Page; Aleksei Aksimentiev
Journal:  J Phys Chem B       Date:  2017-08-09       Impact factor: 2.991

7.  Photoinduced Autonomous Nonequilibrium Operation of a Molecular Shuttle by Combined Isomerization and Proton Transfer Through a Catalytic Pathway.

Authors:  Federico Nicoli; Massimiliano Curcio; Marina Tranfić Bakić; Erica Paltrinieri; Serena Silvi; Massimo Baroncini; Alberto Credi
Journal:  J Am Chem Soc       Date:  2022-05-16       Impact factor: 16.383

8.  Design principles and optimal performance for molecular motors under realistic constraints.

Authors:  Yuhai Tu; Yuansheng Cao
Journal:  Phys Rev E       Date:  2018-02       Impact factor: 2.529

Review 9.  The Physics and Physical Chemistry of Molecular Machines.

Authors:  R Dean Astumian; Shayantani Mukherjee; Arieh Warshel
Journal:  Chemphyschem       Date:  2016-06-15       Impact factor: 3.102

Review 10.  Light-powered, artificial molecular pumps: a minimalistic approach.

Authors:  Giulio Ragazzon; Massimo Baroncini; Serena Silvi; Margherita Venturi; Alberto Credi
Journal:  Beilstein J Nanotechnol       Date:  2015-11-02       Impact factor: 3.649

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