The guanosine hydrazide 1 yields a stable supramolecular hydrogel based on the formation of a guanine quartet (G-quartet) in presence of metal cations. The effect of various parameters (concentration, nature of metal ion, and temperature) on the properties of this gel has been studied. Proton NMR spectroscopy is shown to allow a molecular characterization of the gelation process. Hydrazide 1 and its assemblies can be reversibly decorated by acylhydrazone formation with various aldehydes, resulting in formation of highly viscous dynamic hydrogels. When a mixture of aldehydes is used, the dynamic system selects the aldehyde that leads to the most stable gel. Mixing hydrazides 1, 9 and aldehydes 6, 8 in 1:1:1:1 ratio generated a constitutional dynamic library containing the four acylhydrazone derivatives A, B, C, and D. The library constitution displayed preferential formation of the acylhydrazone B that yields the strongest gel. Thus, gelation redirects the acylhydrazone distribution in the dynamic library as guanosine hydrazide 1 scavenges preferentially aldehyde 8, under the pressure of gelation because of the collective interactions in the assemblies of G-quartets B, despite the strong preference of the competing hydrazide 9 for 8. Gel formation and component selection are thermoreversible. The process amounts to gelation-driven selforganization with component selection and amplification in constitutional dynamic hydrogels based on G-quartet formation and reversible covalent connections. The observed self-organization and component selection occur by means of a multilevel selfassembly involving three dynamic processes, two of supramolecular and one of reversible covalent nature. They extend constitutional dynamic chemistry to phase-organization and phasetransition events.dynamic combinatorial chemistry ͉ component selection ͉ supramolecular chemistry S upramolecular entities present the ability to reversibly modify their constitution through exchange and rearrangement of their molecular components because of the lability of the noncovalent interactions that hold them together (1, 2). Similar features may be imported into molecular species if reversible covalent bonds are introduced into their structure, allowing cleavage and formation of interatomic connections with fragment exchange under specific conditions. Thus, entities, capable of reversible modification of their constitution, define a constitutional dynamic chemistry on both the supramolecular and the molecular levels (3). Because the constitutional changes may be expected to respond to external factors, constitutional dynamic chemistry is the basis for the design and development of adaptive chemical systems. It generates constitutional dynamic libraries (CDLs) whose constituents are in dynamic equilibrium, such that they can exchange their components and express all of the entities that are potentially accessible through recombination by means of reversible covalent bonds and noncovalent interactions. The CDL may then adapt to (internal or) external phy...
Dynamic cationic polymers were generated in aqueous media from functionally complementary monomers bearing nucleobase groups. (1)H NMR spectroscopy was used to follow the polycondensation reaction of the nucleobase-appended dihydrazides 1 and 2 with the dialdehydes B and C. The reversibility of these polymers was established by proton NMR spectroscopy through exchange of the dihydrazide 2 with polymer 1 B. The polymers 1 B, 2 B, 1 C, and 2 C represent dynamic biopolymers of nucleic acid type, DyNAs. Electrostatic interaction of these polymers with polyanionic entities, such as polyphosphates, polynucleotides, and polyaspartic acid, was shown to take place. It induces a change in size of the dynamic polymer, as it responds by an increase in degree of polymerization to an increase of the overall anionic charge introduced, that is, to the total electrostatic interaction.
The self-assembly of guanosine-5'-hydrazide G-1 in D(2)O, in the presence and absence of sodium cations, has been investigated by chiroptical techniques: electronic (ECD) and the newly introduced vibrational (VCD) circular dichroism spectroscopy. Using a combination of ECD and VCD with other methods such as IR, electron microscopy, and electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESI-MS) it was found that G-1 produces long-range chiral aggregates consisting of G-quartets, (G-1)(4), subsequently stacked into columns, [(G-1)(4)](n), induced by binding of metal cations between the (G-1)(4) species. This process, accompanied by gelation of the sample, is highly efficient in the presence of an excess of sodium cations, leading to aggregates with strong quartet-quartet interaction. Thermally induced conformational changes and conformational stability of guanosine-5'-hydrazide assemblies were studied by chiroptical techniques and the melting temperature of the hydrogels formed was obtained. The temperature-dependent experiments indicate that the long-range supramolecular aggregates are dissociated by increasing temperature into less ordered species, monomers, or other intermediates in equilibrium, as indicated by MS experiments.
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