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Proton- versus Cation-Selective Transport of Saccharide Rim-Appended Pillar[5]arene Artificial Water Channels.

Iuliana M AndreiWenzhang ChenMarc BaadenStéphane P VincentMihail Barboiu
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2023)
Transport of water across cell membranes is a fundamental process for important biological functions. Herein, we focused our research on a new type of symmetrical saccharide rim-functionalized pillar[5]arene (PA-S) artificial water channels with variable pore structures. To point out the versatility of PA-S channels, we systematically varied the nature of anchoring/gate keepers d-mannoside, d-mannuronic acid, or sialic acid H-bonding groups on lateral pillar[5]arene (PA) arms, known as good membrane adhesives, to best describe the influence of the chemical structure on their transport activity. The control of hydrophobic membrane binding-hydrophilic water binding balance is an important feature influencing the channels' structuration and efficiency for a proper insertion into bilayer membranes. The glycosylated PA channels' transport performances were assessed in lipid bilayer membranes, and the channels were able to transport water at high rates (∼10 6 -10 7 waters/s/channel within 1 order of magnitude as for aquaporins), serving as selective proton railways with total Na + and K + rejection. Molecular simulation substantiates the idea that the PAs can generate supramolecular pores, featuring hydrophilic carbohydrate gate-keepers that serve as water-sponge relays at the channel entrance, effectively absorbing and redirecting water within the channel. The present channels may be regarded as a rare biomimetic example of artificial channels presenting proton vs cation transport selectivity performances.
Keyphrases
  • ionic liquid
  • stem cells
  • minimally invasive
  • single cell
  • water soluble
  • bone marrow
  • binding protein
  • single molecule
  • neural network
  • electron transfer