| Literature DB >> 32946649 |
Heng Wang1, Li-Peng Zhou2, Yu Zheng3, Kun Wang4, Bo Song5, Xuzhou Yan6, Lukasz Wojtas7, Xu-Qing Wang8, Xin Jiang9, Ming Wang9, Qing-Fu Sun2, Bingqian Xu10, Hai-Bo Yang8, Andrew C-H Sue11, Yi-Tsu Chan12, Jonathan L Sessler13, Yang Jiao3, Peter J Stang14, Xiaopeng Li1.
Abstract
Supramolecular cages/vesicles in biology display sophisticated structures and functions by utilizing a few types of protein subunit quasi-equivalently at distinct geometrical locations. However, synthetic supramolecular cages still lack comparable complexity to reach the high levels of functionality found in natural systems. Herein we report the self-assembly of giant pentagonal supramolecular prisms (molecular weight >50 kDa) with tetratopic pyridinyl subunits serving different geometrical roles within the structures, and their packing into a novel superstructure with unexpected three-fold rotational symmetry in a single two-dimensional layer of crystalline state. The formation of these complicated structures is controlled by both the predetermined angles of the ligands and the mismatched structural tensions created from the multi-layered geometry of the building blocks. Such a self-assembly strategy is extensively used by viruses to increase the volume and complexity of capsids and would provide a new approach to construct highly sophisticated supramolecular architectures.Keywords: geometrically non-equivalent subunits; pentagonal packing; self-assembly; supramolecular prisms
Year: 2020 PMID: 32946649 DOI: 10.1002/anie.202010805
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ISSN: 1433-7851 Impact factor: 15.336