Dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) is widely used as a solvent in the life sciences, however, it is somewhat toxic and affects cell behaviours in a range of ways. Here, we propose a zwitterionic liquid (ZIL), a zwitterion-type ionic liquid containing histidine-like module, as a new alternative to DMSO. ZIL is not cell permeable, less toxic to cells and tissues, and has great potential as a vehicle for various hydrophobic drugs. Notably, ZIL can serve as a solvent for stock solutions of platinating agents, whose anticancer effects are completely abolished by dissolution in DMSO. Furthermore, ZIL possesses suitable affinity to the plasma membrane and acts as a cryoprotectant. Our results suggest that ZIL is a potent, multifunctional and biocompatible solvent that compensates for many shortcomings of DMSO.
The highly crystalline nature of cellulose results in poor processability and solubility, necessitating the search for solvents that can efficiently dissolve this material. Thus, ionic liquids (ILs) have recently been shown to be well suited for this purpose, although the corresponding dissolution mechanism has not been studied in detail. Herein, we adopt a molecular dynamics (MD) approach to study the dissolution of model cellulose crystal structures in imidazolium-based ILs and gain deep mechanistic insights, demonstrating that dissolution involves IL penetration-induced cleavage of hydrogen bonds between cellulose molecular chains. Moreover, we reveal that in ILs with high cellulose dissolving power (powerful solvents, such as 1-allyl-3-methylimidazolium chloride and 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium chloride), the above molecular chains are peeled from the crystal phase and subsequently dispersed in the solvent, whereas no significant structural changes are observed in poor-dissolving-power solvents. Finally, we utilize MD trajectory analysis to show that the solubility of microcrystalline cellulose is well correlated with the number of intermolecular hydrogen bonds in cellulose crystals. The obtained results allow us to conclude that both anions and cations of high-dissolving-power ILs contribute to the stepwise breakage of hydrogen bonds between cellulose chains, whereas this breakage does not occur to a sufficient extent in poorly solubilizing ILs.
Cryopreservation of cells is necessary for long periods of storage. However, some cell lines cannot be efficiently cryopreserved, even when optimized commercial cryoprotectants are employed. Previously, we found that a low-toxic synthetic zwitterion aqueous solution enabled good cryopreservation. However, this zwitterion solution could not cryopreserve some cells, such as human kidney BOSC cells, with good efficiency. Therefore, details of the cryoprotective effect of the zwitterions and optimization based on its mechanisms are required. Herein, we synthesized 18 zwitterion species and assessed the effects of the physical properties of water/zwitterion mixtures. Non-cell-permeable zwitterions can inhibit ice crystal formation extracellularly via direct interaction with water and intracellularly via dehydration of cells. However, cells that could not be cryopreserved by zwitterions were insufficiently dehydrated in the zwitterion solution. Dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) was combined as a cell-permeable cryoprotectant to compensate for the shortcomings of non-cell-permeable zwitterions. The water/zwitterion/DMSO (90/10/15, v/w/w) could cryopreserve different cells, for example freezing-vulnerable K562 and OVMANA cells; yielding ~1.8-fold cell viability compared to the case using a commercial cryoprotectant. Furthermore, molecular dynamics simulation indicated that the zwitterions protected the cell membrane from the collapse induced by DMSO.
The structural stabilities of the molecular chain sheets constituting the crystal structures of the cellulose allomorphs Iα, Iβ, II, and IIII were investigated by density functional theory (DFT) optimization of the isolated chain sheet models with finite dimensions. The DFT-optimized chain sheet models of the two native cellulose crystals developed a right-handed twist with a similar amount of twisting. The DFT-optimized cellulose II (010) and (020) models twisted in opposite directions with right- and left-handed chirality, respectively. The cellulose IIII (1-10) model retained the initial flat structure after the DFT-optimization. The structural features of the DFT-optimized chain sheet models were reflected in the structures of the parent crystal models observed in solvated molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. The minor conformations of the hydroxymethyl groups proposed in the real crystal structures were detected in the MD crystal models and the DFT-optimized (010) model of cellulose II. The crystal chain packing and crystal conversions are interpreted in terms of principal chain sheet stacking.
A joint computational and experimental approach uncovered that the position effect of the ether oxygen atom in pyrrolidinium-based room temperature ionic liquids on the physicochemical properties.
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