Archive for the ‘Subject Areas’ Category

Supramolecular splicing: Catalytic fusion of supramolecules

Non-covalent interactions dictate the assembly of many of nature’s most elegant structures. Similarly, supramolecular chemists have long been intrigued by the challenge of designing functional structures that spontaneously self-assemble from simpler fragments which mutually recognise each other.

A popular self-assembly approach is to produce coordination compounds from transition metal salts with rigid organic ligands. Directional bonding around transition metal centres allows the production of predictable and controllable shapes. Michael Schmittel’s group at the University of Siegen have been exploring a newer approach. They prepared two assemblies, a 2-component triangle T1 and a 3-component rectangle R1. The transition metal “corner” arrangements in T1 and R1 are disfavoured, so if the two assemblies are combined the components re-shuffle to form a more favourable assembly- the 5-component triangle T2. The transformation occurs at room temperature, and can be completed in just 1 hour in the presence of a catalyst, which accelerates the re-shuffling by labilising the metal-ligand bonds.

Supramolecular splicing: Catalytic fusion of supramolecules: re-shuffling of a 2-component triangle and a 3-component rectangle to give a more favoured supramolecular 5-component triangle

Unlike previous examples, the conditions needed for the transformation are very mild. The authors compare the process to gene shuffling, the combination of dissimilar genes to form new genetic material. The strategy could be considered a first step towards the evolution of supramolecular architectures, and a great route to more complex supramolecular assemblies with higher information content.

The full communication can be downloaded here (free to access for a limited period).

Cally Haynes

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Overcoat makes carbon quantum dots biocompatible

Quantum dots are currently being developed for a variety of applications, including as sensors and cellular tags. Semiconductor quantum dots are attractive for their high fluorescence quantum yields but the toxicity of some of the metals involved, such as cadmium, pose a problem for biological applications.

Carbon quantum dots (CQDs) offer an alternative however when transferred into aqueous solution they possess low quantum yields. The problem is how do you harness the higher fluorescence of CQDs prepared in an organic solvent for biological applications?

To answer this question John Callan and his team have employed an amphiphilic polymer to act as an overcoat and transfer agent for the CQDs. Surprisingly they found that the transfer actually improved the quantum yield rather than the normally expected repression when ligand exchange is used. These aqueous carbon quantum dots were taken up into cells and were found to be non-toxic.

Chinese Hamster Ovarian cells loaded with carbon quantum dots

The development of inexpensive and biocompatible quantum dots with an improved quantum yield holds great potential for a wide range of future biological applications.

To find out more, download the ChemComm article today (free to access for a limited period).

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High yielding catenane synthesis? Surely not!

Rapid thermally assisted donor–acceptor catenation

The X-ray crystal structures of two azide-functionalised catenanes

Entropy is not a friend of the macrocyclic chemist because creating large cyclic molecules by tying together several building blocks creates a high thermodynamic hurdle to cross. Nature has been forming these types of molecules for many millions of years and has provided inspiration for chemists to overcome these synthetic challenges. Perhaps purely for the academic interest, work began on investigating if it was possible to interlock two of these cyclic molecules together and form what is known as a catenane. Imagine a pot of spaghetti cooking and think of the strands tumbling around in the boiling water. Now imagine trying to tie all the ends together at the same time. Most will form individual rings but statistically a small number of those rings will be linked together. Conceptually this sounds easy but the reality is not so straight forward. A secondary problem is that only very small amounts of the linked rings are formed which means most of the starting material is wasted.

As interest in these curious molecules grew their potential application as switches for molecular electronics and sensors became apparent. However, if these applications were ever to be realised the cost of their formation would need to be feasible on a commercial scale. Macrocyclic chemists dream of yields over 50%, yet most chemists would be embarrassed to report a yield like this! However, we must remember that these reactions are inherently unfavourable so to achieve respectable yields we need to ‘stack the deck in our favour’ and try to make the interlocking of the rings more favourable.

Deceptively simple but incredibly effective ways of using what are commonly thought of as weak interactions have been used to hold the two fragments together, making the subsequent formation of the interlocked rings (rather than two separate rings) much more likely.  In a recent report in Chemical Communications, Fraser Stoddart and co-workers at Northwestern University, Texas A&M University and the King Abdullah City for Science and Technology report a significant development in catenane synthesis whereby yields of almost 90% are possible. As almost quantitative conversions are now being reported the commercial application of these molecules, which has for so long been discussed, moves another step closer.

Rapid thermally assisted donor–acceptor catenation
Albert C. Fahrenbach, Karel J. Hartlieb, Chi-Hau Sue, Carson J. Bruns, Gokhan Barin, Subhadeep Basu, Mark A. Olson, Youssry Y. Botros, Abdulaziz Bagabas, Nezar H. Khdary and J. Fraser Stoddart
Chem. Commun., 2012,48, 9141-9143
DOI: 10.1039/C2CC34427K

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Lab-in-a-syringe approach to separating biomarkers from blood samples

Scientists in China have developed a novel method to prepare ordered mesoporous silica fibres. The fibres can enrich endogenous peptides in under three minutes with a lab-in-syringe approach. The technique does not need electrical devices such as a centrifugal machine or vortex shaker.

The team says that the lab-in-syringe approach could be applied to separation sciences and it could be used in drug delivery, catalysis, and sensor and optical devices.

Electrospinning-based synthesis of highly ordered mesoporous silica fiber for lab-in-syringe enrichment of plasma peptides
Gangtian Zhu, Xiao-Shui Li, Xiao-Meng Fu, Juan-Yuan Wu, Bi-Feng Yuan and Y.-Q. Feng
DOI: 10.1039/C2CC34761J

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Cheaper dye-sensitised solar cells

Scientists in Germany and Switzerland have used metal-free plastic cathodes to replace expensive transparent conducting oxide-coated electrodes in dye-sensitised solar cells.

The team says that a record metal-free plastic cathode cell performance of 4.22% can be achieved at full sun, which is 27% less than the standard value of platinised transparent conducting oxide-coated electrodes, but at a fraction of the cost.

Towards flexibility: Metal free plastic cathodes for Dye sensitized solar cells
Shahzada Ahmad, Elisa Dell’Orto, Jun-Ho Yum, Florian Kessler, Mohammad Khaja Nazeeruddin and Michael Gratzel
DOI: 10.1039/C2CC35038F

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Making light work of hydrogel formation

UK scientists have developed a new way to make hydrogels using light. The hydrogels could be used in a range of applications from cell culture to biosensors.

Graphical abstract: Dipeptide hydrogelation triggered via ultraviolet lightDave Adams, at the University of Liverpool, and colleagues made the hydrogels from dipeptide conjugates using UV light to trigger the gelation. Unlike previous light-activated gelations, the team used a photoacid generator (a molecule that is photolysed by light to produce an acid) to lower the pH of the gelator solution below the apparent pKa of the gelators, resulting in gelation.

The team showed that they could pattern the hydrogel using a photomask. The patterned channels of gels could be used in microfluidics, biosensors and synthetic biomaterials, the team suggest.

Read more about this research in Adams’ ChemComm communication, free to access for a limited period.

Also of interest:
Chem Soc Rev critical review: Supramolecular gels formed from multi-component low molecular weight species

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Highlights from themed issues on ionic liquids

Ionic liquids ChemComm web themed issueCrystal engineering with ionic liquids CrystEngComm CollectionInterfaces of ionic liquids PCCP Themed issue

The field of ionic liquids has seen phenomenal growth in recent years, with the topic spanning a variety of disciplines across the chemical sciences. The recent themed issues from ChemComm, PCCP and CrystEngComm showcase some of the latest developments from a range of scientific subjects utilising the unique properties of ionic liquids.

Highlights from these themed issues include the articles below, which are free to download until the 24th August. You can also access the full themed issues by clicking on the buttons above.

CrystEngComm journal cover imageIonic liquids as crystallisation media for inorganic materials Ejaz Ahmed, Joachim Breternitz, Matthias Friedrich Groh and Michael Ruck, CrystEngComm, 2012, 14, 4874-4885

Ionic liquids in confined geometries Susan Perkin, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2012, 14, 5052-5062

Fluorescence monitoring of ionic liquid-facilitated biopolymer mobilization and reorganization Luke M. Haverhals, Laura M. Nevin, Matthew P. Foley, E. Kathryn Brown, Hugh C. De Long and Paul C. Trulove, Chem. Commun., 2012, 48, 6417-6419

Hofmeister effects of ionic liquids in protein crystallization: Direct and water-mediated interactions Magdalena Kowacz, Abhik Mukhopadhyay, Ana Luísa Carvalho, José M. S. S. Esperança, Maria J. Romão and Luís Paulo N. Rebelo, CrystEngComm, 2012, 14, 4912-4921

Influence of the ionic liquid/gas surface on ionic liquid chemistry Kevin R. J. Lovelock, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2012, 14, 5071-5089

ChemComm cover imageOptically responsive switchable ionic liquid for internally-referenced fluorescence monitoring and visual determination of carbon dioxide Shubha Pandey, Sheila N. Baker, Siddharth Pandey and Gary A. Baker, Chem. Commun., 2012, 48, 7043-7045

Supramolecular architectures of symmetrical dicationic ionic liquid based systems Haregewine Tadesse, Alexander J. Blake, Neil R. Champness, John E. Warren, Pierre J. Rizkallah and Peter Licence, CrystEngComm, 2012, 14, 4886-4893

New insights into the interface between a single-crystalline metal electrode and an extremely pure ionic liquid: slow interfacial processes and the influence of temperature on interfacial dynamics Marcel Drüschler, Natalia Borisenko, Jens Wallauer, Christian Winter, Benedikt Huber, Frank Endres and Bernhard Roling, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2012, 14, 5090-5099

An elegant access to formation and vaporization enthalpies of ionic liquids by indirect DSC experiment and “in silico” calculations Sergey P. Verevkin, Dzmitry H. Zaitsau, Vladimir N. Emel’yanenko, Christoph Schick, Saivenkataraman Jayaraman and Edward J. Maginn, Chem. Commun., 2012, 48, 6915-6917

PCCP journal cover imageIonic liquid-mediated epitaxy of high-quality C60 crystallites in a vacuum Yoko Takeyama, Shingo Maruyama, Hiroki Taniguchi, Mitsuru Itoh, Keiji Ueno and Yuji Matsumoto, CrystEngComm, 2012, 14, 4939-4945

Proton transfer and polarity changes in ionic liquid–water mixtures: a perspective on hydrogen bonds from ab initio molecular dynamics at the example of 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium acetate–water mixtures—Part 1 Martin Brehm, Henry Weber, Alfonso S. Pensado, Annegret Stark and Barbara Kirchner, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2012, 14, 5030-5044

Direct visualization of solution morphology of cellulose in ionic liquids by conventional TEM at room temperature Nan Luo, Yuxia Lv, Dexiu Wang, Jinming Zhang, Jin Wu, Jiasong He and Jun Zhang, Chem. Commun., 2012, 48, 6283-6285

If you’re interested in ionic liquids, why not take a look at the recent cross-journal promotion Incredible ionic liquids: an article collection.

You can keep up to date with all the latest developments across the chemical sciences by signing up to your favourite journal e-alerts or following them on twitter!

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Luminogenic materials have a bright future

Luminogenic materials are a hot topic of research due to their potential applications in biotechnology and memory systems. But most luminogenic materials undergo aggregation-caused quenching (ACQ) in the solid state. This is when the dye molecules near each other aggregate and form species that weaken the material’s emission.

Ben Zhong Tang and his team have been researching materials that instead exhibit aggregation-induced emission (AIE). This makes the preparation of solid state luminogens much simpler as aggregation increases the activity. Unfortunately, there are few AIE-active emitters in the longer wavelength region, which is of interest for biotechnology applications.

Tang’s team have addressed this oversight by developing a novel luminogen which couples the AIE property of tetraphenylethene and the longer wavelength activity of a hemicyanine dye. The emission properties of the resultant crystals can be readily tuned by the solvent molecules in the solution they are grown from.

Crystochromism of the novel luminogen

Most interestingly, the prepared luminogen shows crystochromism: a strong yellow emission in its thermodynamically stable crystalline form and a red colour in its metastable amorphous form. These changes are fully reversible, with grinding, heating or fuming causing the change in the luminogen’s crystallinity.

To find out more, download the ChemComm article today.

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pHantastic developments in lysosomal storage disease research

Lysosomes are cellular organelles that contain enzymes which break down cellular waste, a bit like stomachs. They have an internal pH of 4.8 and maintain this acidic pH (compared to the cytosol, pH 7.2) by pumping protons across the membrane. Changes in lysosomal pH can indicate the onset of disease.  In fact, elevated lysosomal pH has been noted in several lysosomal storage diseases. This group of around 50 rare, inherited, metabolic disorders result in symptoms such as seizures, deafness and/or blindness.

Now David Parker and colleagues at the University of Durham have designed responsive, low molecular weight probes which can permeate the target organelle and report the pH using a ratiometric signal. The probes could help evaluate the impact of drugs created to treat lysosomal storage diseases.

The team made europium and terbium complexes of two structurally related ligands that contain a sulfonamide moiety which acts like a switch, reversibly binding to the lanthanide and changing the metal coordination environment. The change is signalled by variation of emission spectral form and relative intensity and also modulates the circular polarisation of luminescence as the local helicity at the metal centre switches.  

Testing in a range of cell lines and altering the pH of the cellular and intracellular environment, the researchers developed an emission intensity ratio method using lanthanide luminescence which can be used to assess lysosomal pH variation for the first time.

Find out more by reading their ChemComm communication, free to download for a limited period.

Also of interest:
Times have changed since David Parker wrote his first ChemComm on a typewriter. He discusses his research path, chemical prostitution and targeted devastation in his ChemComm interview.

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Yong-Qiang Tu joins the ChemComm Editorial Board

Yong-Qiang TuOn behalf of the ChemComm Editorial Board, I am delighted to welcome Professor Yong-Qiang Tu as the new ChemComm Associate Editor for organic chemistry.

Professor Tu is a council member of Chinese Chemistry Society and the president of Gansu Chemistry Society. His current research interests centre on tandem rearrangement reactions and their application to the total syntheses of bioactive alkaloids, synthetic studies of biologically active natural products, and the construction of C-C and C-N bonds via C-H functionalisations.

Professor Tu’s editorial office is now open for submissions, welcoming urgent communications highlighting the latest advances in organic chemistry.

Find out more about Professor Tu’s research by reading these exciting articles:

Total synthesis of (±)-maistemonine and (±)-stemonamide
Zhi-Hua Chen, Yong-Qiang Zhang, Zhi-Min Chen, Yong-Qiang Tu and Fu-Min Zhang
Chem. Commun., 2011,47, 1836-1838, DOI: 10.1039/C0CC02612C, Communication

Enantioselective bromination/semipinacol rearrangement for the synthesis of β-bromoketones containing an all-α-carbon quaternary center
Hui Li ,  Fu-Min Zhang ,  Yong-Qiang Tu ,  Qing-Wei Zhang ,  Zhi-Min Chen ,  Zhi-Hua Chen and Jian Li
Chem. Sci., 2011,2, 1839-1841, DOI: 10.1039/C1SC00295C

Are you an organic chemist based in North America? Submit your research to Michael Krische, ChemComm North American Associate Editor for organic chemistry.

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