Login / Signup

Temperature Control of the Self-Assembly Process of 4-Aminoquinoline Amphiphile: Selective Construction of Perforated Vesicles and Nanofibers, and Structural Restoration Capability.

Yosuke HisamatsuGo ToriyamaKatsuhiro YamamotoHiroshi TakaseTsunehiko HiguchiNaoki Umezawa
Published in: Chemistry (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2024)
The construction of diverse and distinctive self-assembled structures in water, based on the control of the self-assembly processes of artificial small molecules, has received considerable attention in supramolecular chemistry. Cage-like perforated vesicles are distinctive and interesting self-assembled structures. However, the development of self-assembling molecules that can easily form perforated vesicles remains challenging. This paper reports a lower critical solution temperature (LCST) behavior-triggered self-assembly property of a 4-aminoquinoline (4-AQ)-based amphiphile with a tetra(ethylene glycol) chain, in HEPES buffer (pH 7.4). This property allows to form perforated vesicles after heating at 80 °C (> LCST). The self-assembly process of the 4-AQ amphiphile can be controlled by heating at 80 °C (> LCST) or 60 °C (< LCST). After cooling to room temperature, the selective construction of the perforated vesicles and nanofibers was achieved from the same 4-AQ amphiphile. Furthermore, the perforated vesicles exhibited slow morphological transformation into intertwined-like nanofibers but were easily restored by brief heating above the LCST.
Keyphrases
  • room temperature
  • high resolution
  • emergency department
  • working memory
  • adverse drug