AG百家乐代理-红桃KAG百家乐娱乐城

Research News

Prof. Barboiu from the Lehn Institute of Functional Materials developed adaptive hydroxy channels for selective water cluster permeation

Source: School of Chemistry
Edited by: Tan Rongyu, Wang Dongmei

Proteins have evolved for millions of years to adopt their current functional structures. Although they are remarkable in functional efficacy, their structural complexity and environmental sensitivity undermine their reproducibility and further applications for “out of membrane cell” use. Therefore, one of the most ambitious goals in current separation science and technology is to accomplish the reconstruction of natural carriers or channels through synthetic design.

Aquaporins are widespread natural proteins in living organisms that form channels spanning cell membranes to control the translocation of water, while rejecting all ions. Accordingly, artificial water channels (AWCs) have been studied for many years to achieve water permeability very close to their natural counterparts, fulfilling the transport of water across membranes. As shown in Fig. 1, a decade after their discovery, the following AWCs have been found and well investigated, including carbon nanotube porins (CNTPs; Fig. 1a,b), Pillar[5]arene (PAP5; Fig. 1c), Pillar[4]arene (PAH[4]) clusters (Fig. 1d), Aquafoldamers (Fig. 1e), Porous organic cages (POCs; Fig. 1f), Pillar[5]arene hydrazones (PAH5; Fig. 1g), Pillar[5]arene-AQPs (Fig. 1h) and I-quartet water channels (Fig. 1i,j), of which only a few synthetic channels are capable of selective water transport. Hence, only through intelligent molecular design, the functions of aquaporins can be mimicked by AWCs. Moreover, synthetic channels have several advantages over natural proteins, such as cost-effective, chemically robust and easy compatibility with membranes, which make them particularly promising AWCs candidates for industrial applications.


Fig.1 Structures of well-investigated artificial water channels.

Recently, Prof. Mihail Barboiu and his PhD student, Li-Bo Huang, from Lehn Institute of Functional Materials (LIFM), School of Chemistry, Sun Yat-sen University developed adaptive hydroxy channels for selective water cluster permeation. Such OH-channels also achieve the rejection of almost all ions and even protons. Their structures are shown in Fig. 2. The octyl acts as the "tail" of the molecule, which allows the channel to be steadily embedded into the lipid bilayer; the ureido acts as the "backbone" of the channel, and the continuous and iterative H-bonding plays a vital role in their stabilization; the polyols act as the "head" of the molecule, which contact with H2O directly in order to transport water and reject ions by controlling the size of the channel.


Fig. 2. Chemical (left) and crystal (right) structures of the compounds for hydroxy channels.

Furthermore, Prof. Mihail Barboiu and his co-workers quantify the water permeability and ion transport activity for OH-channels based on vesicles. In the water transport experiments, different concentrations of channel compounds were injected into the vesicle suspension, and after OH-channels were embedded and self-assembled, the vesicles were exposed to an outward directed osmotic pressure gradient. Then, the shrinkage of vesicles was recorded by a Stopped-flow instrument. The hydroxy channels achieve a single-channel permeabilty of 2.33 × 108 water molecules per second, which is within the same order of magnitude as the transport rates for aquaporins. More interestingly, as the concentrations of the injected compounds increased gradually, the water transport rate also increased linearly. Until the concentration over mCLR = 1.5, the permeability of H2, H3 and H4 channels significantly increased by two orders of magnitude, while no significant increase was found in other channels. They put forward that, after reaching a certain stacking density, the channels spontaneously transformed from the originally narrow (2.7 ?) structure to large-scale pores and selectively transport water clusters, and this transport process was verified by molecular dynamics simulations. Ion transport experiments were performed under similar conditions, and the fluorescence traces showed there was no ion or proton transported, which fitted with aquaporins well.

This work demostrates the water transport as water-wire or cluster through OH-channels in the lipid bilayer, and reveals the mechanism of water-wire/cluster transport. Meanwhile, the self-assembled water channel is optimized to achieve complete rejection of ions and protons, which enrich the library of AWCs. Within this context, this discovery of OH-channels opens up new directions and perspectives in AWCs research toward the construction of selective membranes for desalination.

The research progress was recently published in the Journal of the American Chemical Society and selected as the cover paper. This work was financially supported by NSFC (National Natural Science Foundation of China), CSC (China Scholarship Council), ANR (Agence Nationale de la Recherche WATERCHANNELS) and the Lehn Institute of Functional Materials.

Cite this: L.-B. Huang, A. Hardiagon, I. Kocsis, C.-A. Jegu, M. Deleanu, A. Gilles, A. van der Lee, F. Sterpone, M. Baaden, M. Barboiu. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2021, DOI: 10.1021/jacs.0c11952.
Access to this paper: https://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.0c11952

找真人百家乐官网的玩法技巧和规则| 曼哈顿百家乐官网的玩法技巧和规则 | 网上百家乐官网内幕| 百家乐官网论坛博彩啦| 沙龙百家乐官网代理| 尊龙国际| 百家乐精神| 百家乐官网信誉博彩公司| 哪个百家乐平台信誉好| 铜山县| 南京百家乐的玩法技巧和规则| 百家乐官网有没有攻略| 聚众玩百家乐的玩法技巧和规则 | 深州市| 最大的百家乐网站| 太阳城百家乐官网手机投注| 迪威百家乐娱乐场| 百家乐官网稳赢投注方法| 玩百家乐678娱乐城| 百家乐官网娱乐城有几家| 德州扑克网页游戏| 澳门百家乐官网先赢后输| 大发888玩法技巧| 澳门百家乐有没有假| 百家乐官网1元投注| 百家乐官网真人荷官| 澳门百家乐官网网上娱乐场开户注册 | 百家乐连开6把小| 赌场风云国语| 百家乐注册赠分| 百家乐官网赌场高手| 澳门百家乐官网经历| 大富豪棋牌游戏中心| 太阳城管理| 真人百家乐蓝盾| 在线百家乐合作| 国际娱百家乐官网的玩法技巧和规则| 威尼斯人娱乐棋牌下载| 玩百家乐技巧巧| 百家乐博彩平台| 百家乐视频对对碰|