Literature DB >> 29078355

Molecular photoswitches mediating the strain-driven disassembly of supramolecular tubules.

Jean W Fredy1,2, Alejandro Méndez-Ardoy1, Supaporn Kwangmettatam1,2, Davide Bochicchio3, Benjamin Matt2, Marc C A Stuart4, Jurriaan Huskens1, Nathalie Katsonis2, Giovanni M Pavan5, Tibor Kudernac6.   

Abstract

Chemists have created molecular machines and switches with specific mechanical responses that were typically demonstrated in solution, where mechanically relevant motion is dissipated in the Brownian storm. The next challenge consists of designing specific mechanisms through which the action of individual molecules is transmitted to a supramolecular architecture, with a sense of directionality. Cellular microtubules are capable of meeting such a challenge. While their capacity to generate pushing forces by ratcheting growth is well known, conversely these versatile machines can also pull microscopic objects apart through a burst of their rigid tubular structure. One essential feature of this disassembling mechanism is the accumulation of strain in the tubules, which develops when tubulin dimers change shape, triggered by a hydrolysis event. We envision a strategy toward supramolecular machines generating directional pulling forces by harnessing the mechanically purposeful motion of molecular switches in supramolecular tubules. Here, we report on wholly synthetic, water-soluble, and chiral tubules that incorporate photoswitchable building blocks in their supramolecular architecture. Under illumination, these tubules display a nonlinear operation mode, by which light is transformed into units of strain by the shape changes of individual switches, until a threshold is reached and the tubules unleash the strain energy. The operation of this wholly synthetic and stripped-down system compares to the conformational wave by which cellular microtubules disassemble. Additionally, atomistic simulations provide molecular insight into how strain accumulates to induce destabilization. Our findings pave the way toward supramolecular machines that would photogenerate pulling forces, at the nanoscale and beyond. Published under the PNAS license.

Entities:  

Keywords:  artificial molecular switches; light; supramolecular machines; supramolecular polymers

Year:  2017        PMID: 29078355      PMCID: PMC5692565          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1711184114

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


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  13 in total

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5.  Mechanical adaptability of artificial muscles from nanoscale molecular action.

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6.  Molecular Factors Controlling the Isomerization of Azobenzenes in the Cavity of a Flexible Coordination Cage.

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7.  Rational design of a photoswitchable DNA glue enabling high regulatory function and supramolecular chirality transfer.

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10.  Molecular Photoswitching in Confined Spaces.

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