| Literature DB >> 30664631 |
Brian Daly1, Thomas S Moody1, Allen J M Huxley1, Chaoyi Yao1, Benjamin Schazmann1, Andre Alves-Areias1, John F Malone1, H Q Nimal Gunaratne1, Peter Nockemann1, A Prasanna de Silva2.
Abstract
Molecular-logic based computation (MLBC) has grown by accumulating many examples of combinational logic gates and a few sequential variants. In spite of many inspirations being available in biology, there are virtually no examples of MLBC in chemistry where sequential and combinational operations are integrated. Here we report a simple alcohol-ketone redox interconversion which switches a macrocycle between a large or small cavity, with erect aromatic walls which create a deep hydrophobic space or with collapsed walls respectively. Small aromatic guests can be captured or released in an all or none manner upon chemical command. During capture, the fluorescence of the alcohol macrocycle is quenched via fluorescent photoinduced electron transfer switching, meaning that its occupancy state is self-indicated. This represents a chemically-driven RS Flip-Flop, one of whose outputs is fed into an INHIBIT gate. Processing of outputs from memory stores is seen in the injection of packaged neurotransmitters into synaptic clefts for onward neural signalling. Overall, capture-release phenomena from discrete supermolecules now have a Boolean basis.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30664631 PMCID: PMC6341106 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-018-07902-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Fig. 1Memory, chemical compounds and X-ray crystallography. a Physical electronic representation of a computer memory which is conceptually related to the redox-induced reversible guest capture/release by 1/2 in the solid state. b Truth table for redox-induced reversible guest capture/release by 1/2. c Molecular structures 1–4 & 6–9 (no stereochemistry is implied). The structure numbers and group identities of hosts, guests and synthetic intermediate are shown in the arbitrary colours of red, blue and green, respectively. d–j X-ray crystal structures of 2 (d, e, g, h) and 1 (f, i, j) after separate crystallization from benzene. Ball-and-stick representation in elevation view (g, i), space-fill representation (with calculated hydrogen positions included) in plan view (e, f) and ball-and-stick representation in plan view (h, j), are shown in each case, respectively. Case d is a space-fill representation (with calculated hydrogen positions included) of 2 shown in elevation view to emphasize the ‘wall’ aspect of the host
1H NMR and fluorescence emission spectroscopic data for complexation of 4 and 7–9a
| Datum | 7 | 8 | 9 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 7.72 | 0.74 | 7.66 | 0.58 | 7.62 | 0.52 | |
| 4.58 | 0.36 | 4.50 | 0.26 | 4.40 | 0.31 | |
| 3.14 | 0.29 | 3.27 | 0.22 | 3.46 | 0.42 | |
| — | — | 1.42 | 0.11 | 2.19 | 0.16 | |
| — | — | — | — | 1.97 | 0.26 | |
| log | 4.2 | 3.7 | 4.6 | |||
| log | 4.5 | 4.5 | 4.6 | |||
| QFd | 3.1 | 2.4 | 1.7 | |||
aCompound numbers 4 and 7–9 are given in bold formatting. D2O, pD 10.0 for all experiments except fluorescence spectroscopy. δ values for 7–9 are given. Δδ values of −0.02 + 0.02 for all protons are seen when 3 is used instead of 4. The uncertainty in this case is the sample-to-sample variability. For details, see Supplementary Tables 1–3. The critical aggregation concentrations (CAC) of 4 and 3 are 1.6 × 10−3 and 2.0 × 10−3 M, respectively
bDetermined by 1H NMR spectroscopy from analysis of Δδ values for δArH, according to the equation (Δδ / Δδmax)/[1 − (Δδ / Δδmax)]2 = βa[73], where a is the concentration of 7–9. 1:1 molar ratios of 4:7–9 are maintained in the concentration range 10−5–10−3 M
cH2O, pH 10.0. Determined by fluorescence emission spectroscopy from analysis of integrated fluorescence intensity (IF) (excited at 290 nm), according to the equation log[(IFmax − IF) / (IF − IFmin)] = logβ − pa[73,74]. 2.5 × 10−5 M 4, 0–10−3 M of 7–9
dQuenching factor (QF) for integrated fluorescence intensity (IFmax / IFmin)
Fig. 21H NMR spectral evidence for guest binding/non-binding. 1H NMR spectra in D2O, pD 10.0. (1) 7 + 3, (2) 7 + 4 and (3) 7 (all 10−3 M). Δδ values for 7 caused by 4 are shown. Inset. δ values in the 1H NMR spectra of 4 (a part structure is shown) and Δδ values caused by 7
Fig. 3Integrated sequential-combinational logic. a Physical electronic representation of redox-induced reversible guest release/capture by 3/4 in water followed in the latter case by fluorescence signalling according to INHIBIT logic. Output1 is the status of the capturing state, which is characterized by the UV spectroscopic parameter ε = 3,900 M−1 cm−1 at the absorption maximum wavelength (λmax) 290 nm. Output2 is the status of the releasing state, which is characterized by ε = 31,000 M−1 cm−1 at λmax 304 nm. b Truth table for guest (7)-induced quenching of fluorescence of device 3/4 in water corresponding to an INHIBIT logic gate. Guest-free fluorescence quantum yields (ΦFlu) are 0.013 and 0.003 for 4 and 3, respectively, at pH 10.0, determined by comparison with 2-methoxybenzoate in water at pH 8.0 (ΦFlu = 0.011) as secondary standard[68]. 7 quenches the fluorescence of 4 by a factor of 3.1. 7 does not measurably affect the fluorescence of 3. The output is digitized by applying a threshold value of 0.008 to the ΦFlu values