Chiral nanocrystals grown from MoS 2 nanosheets enable photothermally modulated enantioselective release of antimicrobial drugs.
Bang Lin LiJun Jiang LuoHao Lin ZouQing-Meng ZhangLiu-Bin ZhaoHang QianHong Qun LuoDavid Tai LeongNian Bing LiPublished in: Nature communications (2022)
The transfer of the concept of chirality from molecules to synthesized nanomaterials has attracted attention amongst multidisciplinary teams. Here we demonstrate heterogeneous nucleation and anisotropic accumulation of Au nanoparticles on multilayer MoS 2 planes to form chiroptically functional nanomaterials. Thiol amino acids with chiral conformations modulate asymmetric growth of gold nanoarchitectures on seeds of highly faceted Au/MoS 2 heterostructures. Consequently, dendritic plasmonic nanocrystals with partial chiral morphologies are synthesized. The chirality of dendritic nanocrystals inherited from cysteine molecules refers to the structural characteristics and includes specific recognition of enantiomeric molecules. With integration of the intrinsic photothermal properties and inherited enantioselective characteristics, dendritic Au/MoS 2 heterostructures exhibit chirality-dependent release of antimicrobial drugs from hydrogel substrates when activated by exogenous infrared irradiation. A three-in-one strategy involving synthesis of chiral dendritic heterostructures, enantioselective recognition, and controlled drug release system is presented, which improves nanomaterial synthetic technology and enhances our understanding of crucial chirality information.
Keyphrases
- room temperature
- ionic liquid
- drug release
- capillary electrophoresis
- reduced graphene oxide
- drug delivery
- sensitive detection
- visible light
- quantum dots
- staphylococcus aureus
- mass spectrometry
- energy transfer
- amino acid
- gold nanoparticles
- photodynamic therapy
- cancer therapy
- working memory
- radiation therapy
- highly efficient
- hyaluronic acid
- single molecule
- fluorescent probe
- transition metal
- health information
- social media