The formation of condensed matter typically involves a trade-off between structural order and flexibility. As the extent and directionality of interactions between atomic or molecular components increase, materials generally become more ordered but less compliant, and vice versa. Nevertheless, high levels of structural order and flexibility are not necessarily mutually exclusive; there are many biological (such as microtubules, flagella , viruses) and synthetic assemblies (for example, dynamic molecular crystals and frameworks) that can undergo considerable structural transformations without losing their crystalline order and that have remarkable mechanical properties that are useful in diverse applications, such as selective sorption , separation , sensing and mechanoactuation . However, the extent of structural changes and the elasticity of such flexible crystals are constrained by the necessity to maintain a continuous network of bonding interactions between the constituents of the lattice. Consequently, even the most dynamic porous materials tend to be brittle and isolated as microcrystalline powders , whereas flexible organic or inorganic molecular crystals cannot expand without fracturing. Owing to their rigidity, crystalline materials rarely display self-healing behaviour . Here we report that macromolecular ferritin crystals with integrated hydrogel polymers can isotropically expand to 180 per cent of their original dimensions and more than 500 per cent of their original volume while retaining periodic order and faceted Wulff morphologies. Even after the separation of neighbouring ferritin molecules by 50 ångströms upon lattice expansion, specific molecular contacts between them can be reformed upon lattice contraction, resulting in the recovery of atomic-level periodicity and the highest-resolution ferritin structure reported so far. Dynamic bonding interactions between the hydrogel network and the ferritin molecules endow the crystals with the ability to resist fragmentation and self-heal efficiently, whereas the chemical tailorability of the ferritin molecules enables the creation of chemically and mechanically differentiated domains within single crystals.
A large fraction of proteins naturally exist as symmetrical homooligomers or homopolymers 1. The emergent structural and functional properties of such protein assemblies have inspired extensive efforts in biomolecular design 2-5. As synthesized by ribosomes, proteins are inherently asymmetric. Thus, they must acquire multiple surface patches that selectively associate to generate different symmetry elements needed to form higher-order architectures 1,6-a daunting task for protein design. Here we introduce an inorganic chemical approach to address this outstanding problem, whereby multiple modes of protein-protein interactions and symmetry are simultaneously achieved by selective, "one-pot" coordination of soft and hard metal ions. We show that a monomeric protein (protomer) appropriately modified with biologically inspired hydroxamate groups and Zn-binding motifs assembles through concurrent Fe 3+ and Zn 2+ coordination into discrete dodecameric and hexameric cages. Closely resembling natural polyhedral protein architectures 7,8 and unique among designed systems 9-13 , our artificial cages possess tightly packed shells devoid of large apertures, yet they can assemble and disassemble in response to diverse stimuli owing to their heterobimetallic construction on minimal interproteinbonding footprints. With stoichiometries ranging from [2 Fe:9 Zn:6 protomer] to [8 Fe:21 Zn:12 protomer], these protein cages represent some of the compositionally most complex protein assemblies-or inorganic coordination complexes-obtained by design. Users may view, print, copy, and download text and data-mine the content in such documents, for the purposes of academic research, subject always to the full Conditions of use:
We report the rational design and synthesis of a water-stable metal–organic framework (MOF), Fe-HAF-1, constructed from supramolecular, Fe3+-hydroxamate-based polyhedra with mononuclear metal nodes. Owing to its chelate-based construction, Fe-HAF-1 displays exceptional chemical stability in organic and aqueous solvents over a wide pH range (pH 1–14), including in the presence of 5 M NaOH. Despite the charge neutrality of the Fe3+-tris(hydroxamate) centers, Fe-HAF-1 crystals are negatively charged above pH 4. This unexpected property is attributed to the formation of defects during crystallization that results in uncoordinated hydroxamate ligands or hydroxide-coordinated Fe centers. The anionic nature of Fe-HAF-1 crystals enables selective adsorption of positively charged ions in aqueous solution, resulting in efficient separation of organic dyes and other charged species in a size-selective fashion. Fe-HAF-1 presents a new addition to a small group of chelate-based MOFs and provides a rare framework whose 3D connectivity is exclusively formed by metal–hydroxamate coordination.
Owing to their central roles in cellular signaling, construction, and biochemistry, protein-protein interactions (PPIs) and protein self-assembly have become a major focus of molecular design and synthetic biology. In order to circumvent the complexity of constructing extensive non-covalent interfaces, which are typically involved in natural PPIs and protein self-assembly, we have developed two design strategies, Metal-Directed Protein Self-Assembly (MDPSA) and Metal-Templated Interface Redesign (MeTIR). These strategies, inspired by both the proposed evolutionary roles of metals and their prevalence in natural PPIs, take advantage of the favorable properties of metal coordination (bonding strength, directionality, and reversibility) to guide protein self-assembly with minimal design and engineering. Using a small, monomeric protein (cytochrome cb562) as a model building block, we employed MDPSA and MeTIR to create a diverse array of functional supramolecular architectures which range from structurally tunable oligomers to metalloprotein complexes that can properly self-assemble in living cells into novel metalloenzymes. The design principles and strategies outlined herein should be readily applicable to other protein systems with the goal of creating new PPIs and protein assemblies with structures and functions not yet produced by natural evolution.
The co-self-assembly of proteins and nucleic acids (NAs) produces complex biomolecular machines (e.g., ribosomes and telomerases) that represent some of the most daunting targets for biomolecular design. Despite significant advances in protein and DNA or RNA nanotechnology, the construction of artificial nucleoprotein complexes has largely been limited to cases that rely on the NA-mediated spatial organization of protein units, rather than a cooperative interplay between protein- and NA-mediated interactions that typify natural nucleoprotein assemblies. We report here a structurally well-defined synthetic nucleoprotein assembly that forms through the synergy of three types of intermolecular interactions: Watson–Crick base pairing, NA–protein interactions, and protein–metal coordination. The fine thermodynamic balance between these interactions enables the formation of a crystalline architecture under highly specific conditions.
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