Hydrazide-appended pillar[5]arene derivatives have been synthesized. X-ray crystal structure analysis and (1)H NMR studies revealed that the molecules adopt unique tubular conformations. Inserting the molecules into the lipid membranes of vesicles leads to the transport of water through the channels produced by single molecules, as supported by dynamic light scattering and cryo-SEM experiments. The channels exhibit the transport activity at a very low channel to lipid ratio (0.027 mol %), and a water permeability of 8.6 × 10(-10) cm s(-1) is realized. In addition, like natural water channel proteins, the artificial systems also block the transport of protons.
Bioinspired artificial water channels aim to combine the high permeability and selectivity of biological aquaporin (AQP) water channels with chemical stability. Here, we carefully characterized a class of artificial water channels, peptide-appended pillar [5]arenes (PAPs). The average single-channel osmotic water permeability for PAPs is 1.0(±0.3) × 10 −14 cm 3 /s or 3.5(±1.0) × 10 8 water molecules per s, which is in the range of AQPs (3.4∼40.3 × 10 8 water molecules per s) and their current synthetic analogs, carbon nanotubes (CNTs, 9.0 × 10 8 water molecules per s). This permeability is an order of magnitude higher than first-generation artificial water channels (20 to ∼10 7 water molecules per s). Furthermore, within lipid bilayers, PAP channels can self-assemble into 2D arrays. Relevant to permeable membrane design, the pore density of PAP channel arrays (∼2.6 × 10 5 pores per μm 2 ) is two orders of magnitude higher than that of CNT membranes (0.1∼2.5 × 10 3 pores per μm 2 ). PAP channels thus combine the advantages of biological channels and CNTs and improve upon them through their relatively simple synthesis, chemical stability, and propensity to form arrays.artificial aquaporins | artificial water channels | peptide-appended pillar [5]arene | single-channel water permeability | two-dimensional arrays T he discovery of the high water and gas permeability of aquaporins (AQPs) and the development of artificial analogs, carbon nanotubes (CNTs), have led to an explosion in studies aimed at incorporating such channels into materials and devices for applications that use their unique transport properties (1-9). Areas of application include liquid and gas separations (10-13), drug delivery and screening (14), DNA recognition (15), and sensors (16). CNTs are promising channels because they conduct water and gas three to four orders of magnitude faster than predicted by conventional Hagen-Poiseuille flow theory (11). However, their use in large-scale applications has been hampered by difficulties in producing CNTs with subnanometer pore diameters and fabricating membranes in which the CNTs are vertically aligned (4). AQPs also efficiently conduct water across membranes (∼3 billion molecules per second) (17) and are therefore being studied intensively for their use in biomimetic membranes for water purification and other applications (1, 2, 18). The largescale applications of AQPs is complicated by the high cost of membrane protein production, their low stability, and challenges in membrane fabrication (1).Artificial water channels, bioinspired analogs of AQPs created using synthetic chemistry (19), ideally have a structure that forms a water-permeable channel in the center and an outer surface that is compatible with a lipid membrane environment (1). Interest in artificial water channels has grown in recent years, following decades of research and focus on synthetic ion channels (19). However, two fundamental questions remain: (i) Can artificial channels approach the permeability and selectivity of AQP water chan...
Overcoming multidrug resistance is achieved by developing a novel drugdelivery-system paradigm based on azobenzene liposome and phosphatidylcholine-modified upconversion nanoparticle (UCNP) hybrid vesicles for controlled drug release using a nearinfrared (NIR) laser. Upon 980 nm light irradiation, the reversible photoisomerization of the azobenzene derivatives by simultaneous UV and visible light emitted from the UCNPs makes it possible to realize NIR-triggered release of the chemotherapeutic drug doxorubicin.
Peptide-appended pillar[n]arene (n = 5, 6) derivatives have been synthesized. (1)H NMR and IR studies revealed that the molecules adopt a tubular conformation in solution and lipid bilayer membranes. Kinetic measurements using the fluorescent labeling method with lipid vesicles revealed that these molecules can efficiently mediate the transport of amino acids across lipid membranes at a very low channel-to-lipid ratio (EC(50) = 0.002 mol %). In several cases, chiral selectivity for amino acid enantiomers was achieved, which is one of the key functions of natural amino acid channels.
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