Login / Signup

Bio-adhesive Nanoporous Module: Toward Autonomous Gating.

Hyuna JoTakashi KitaoAyumi KimuraYoshimitsu ItohTakuzo AidaKou Okuro
Published in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2021)
Here we report a bio-adhesive porous organic module (Glue COF) composed of hexagonally packed 1D nanopores based on a covalent organic framework. The nanopores are densely decorated with guanidinium ion (Gu+ ) pendants capable of forming salt bridges with oxyanionic species. Glue COF strongly adheres to biopolymers through multivalent salt-bridging interactions with their ubiquitous oxyanionic species. By taking advantage of its strong bio-adhesive nature, we succeeded in creating a gate that possibly opens the nanopores through a selective interaction with a reporter chemical and releases guest molecules. We chose calmodulin (CaM) as a gating component that can stably entrap a loaded guest, sulforhodamine B (SRB), within the nanopores (CaM COF⊃SRB). CaM is known to change its conformation on binding with Ca2+ ions. We confirmed that mixing CaM COF⊃SRB with Ca2+ resulted in the release of SRB from the nanopores, whereas the use of weakly binding Mg2+ ions resulted in a much slower release of SRB.
Keyphrases
  • single molecule
  • solid state
  • water soluble
  • quantum dots
  • protein kinase
  • drug delivery
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • highly efficient
  • binding protein
  • aqueous solution
  • gold nanoparticles
  • tissue engineering