| Literature DB >> 28715207 |
Daniel E Mitchell1, Guy Clarkson1, David J Fox1, Rebecca A Vipond1, Peter Scott1, Matthew I Gibson1,2.
Abstract
Antifreeze proteins are produced by extremophile species to control ice formation and growth, and they have potential applications in many fields. There are few examples of synthetic materials which can reproduce their potent ice recrystallization inhibition property. We report that self-assembled enantiomerically pure, amphipathic metallohelicies inhibited ice growth at just 20 μM. Structure-property relationships and calculations support the hypothesis that amphipathicity is the key motif for activity. This opens up a new field of metallo-organic antifreeze protein mimetics and provides insight into the origins of ice-growth inhibition.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28715207 PMCID: PMC5562393 DOI: 10.1021/jacs.7b05822
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Chem Soc ISSN: 0002-7863 Impact factor: 15.419
Figure 1Triplex metallohelices used in this study. The assemblies comprise three equivalent asymmetric ditopic ligand strands arranged head-to-head-to-tail and with a helical twist, thus rendering all the ligands chemically inequivalent.
Figure 2IRI activity of metallohelix library. (A) IRI activity concentration dependence of metallohelices. (B) Example ice wafer of PBS buffer control. (C) Example wafer for 1. Error bars represent minimum of three repeats, MLGS = mean largest grain size relative to phosphate buffer saline control. Images are of equal magnification, scale bars are 100 μm.
Figure 3Charge distribution and π-stacking in the metallohelices. (a,b) Views of DFT-calculated structure of active compound Λ-1; (c,d) corresponding hydrophobicity plots (water O-atoms colored according to energy scale); and (e,f) views of the molecular structure from X-ray crystallography of the Zn(II) perchlorate analogue of inactive compound 6.