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Hybrid bilayer membranes as platforms for biomimicry and catalysis.

Tian ZengRajendra P GautamDanny H KoHeng-Liang WuAli HosseiniYing LiChristopher J BarileEdmund Chun Ming Tse
Published in: Nature reviews. Chemistry (2022)
Hybrid bilayer membrane (HBM) platforms represent an emerging nanoscale bio-inspired interface that has broad implications in energy catalysis and smart molecular devices. An HBM contains multiple modular components that include an underlying inorganic surface with a biological layer appended on top. The inorganic interface serves as a support with robust mechanical properties that can also be decorated with functional moieties, sensing units and catalytic active sites. The biological layer contains lipids and membrane-bound entities that facilitate or alter the activity and selectivity of the embedded functional motifs. With their structural complexity and functional flexibility, HBMs have been demonstrated to enhance catalytic turnover frequency and regulate product selectivity of the O 2 and CO 2 reduction reactions, which have applications in fuel cells and electrolysers. HBMs can also steer the mechanistic pathways of proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) reactions of quinones and metal complexes by tuning electron and proton delivery rates. Beyond energy catalysis, HBMs have been equipped with enzyme mimics and membrane-bound redox agents to recapitulate natural energy transport chains. With channels and carriers incorporated, HBM sensors can quantify transmembrane events. This Review serves to summarize the major accomplishments achieved using HBMs in the past decade.
Keyphrases
  • electron transfer
  • induced apoptosis
  • cell cycle arrest
  • cell death
  • mass spectrometry
  • cell proliferation
  • fatty acid
  • highly efficient
  • endoplasmic reticulum stress