A Molecular Dual Pump

Artificial molecular machines (AMMs) built from mechanically interlocked molecules (MIMs) can use energy ratchets to control the unidirectional motion of their component parts. These energy ratchets are operated by the alteration of kinetic barriers and thermodynamic wells, which are, in turn, deter...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the American Chemical Society 2019-11, Vol.141 (44), p.17472-17476
Hauptverfasser: Qiu, Yunyan, Zhang, Long, Pezzato, Cristian, Feng, Yuanning, Li, Weixingyue, Nguyen, Minh T, Cheng, Chuyang, Shen, Dengke, Guo, Qing-Hui, Shi, Yi, Cai, Kang, Alsubaie, Fehaid M, Astumian, R. Dean, Stoddart, J. Fraser
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container_end_page 17476
container_issue 44
container_start_page 17472
container_title Journal of the American Chemical Society
container_volume 141
creator Qiu, Yunyan
Zhang, Long
Pezzato, Cristian
Feng, Yuanning
Li, Weixingyue
Nguyen, Minh T
Cheng, Chuyang
Shen, Dengke
Guo, Qing-Hui
Shi, Yi
Cai, Kang
Alsubaie, Fehaid M
Astumian, R. Dean
Stoddart, J. Fraser
description Artificial molecular machines (AMMs) built from mechanically interlocked molecules (MIMs) can use energy ratchets to control the unidirectional motion of their component parts. These energy ratchets are operated by the alteration of kinetic barriers and thermodynamic wells, which are, in turn, determined by the switching on and off of noncovalent interactions. Previously, we have developed artificial molecular pumps (AMPs) capable of pumping rings consecutively onto a collecting chain as part of a molecular dumbbell, leading to the formation of rotaxanes. Here, we report a molecular dual pump (MDP) consisting of two individual AMPs linked in a head-to-tail fashion, wherein a single ring is pumped, in a linear manner, on and off a dumbbell involving a [2]­rotaxane intermediate by exploiting the redox properties of the two pumps. This MDP, defined by the finely tuned noncovalent interactions and fueled by either chemicals or electricity, utilizes an energy ratchet mechanism to capture a ring and subsequently release it back into solution. The unidirectional motion and the resulting controlled capture and release of the ring were followed by 1D and 2D 1H NMR spectroscopy and supported by control experiments. This molecular dual pump may be considered to be a forerunner of AMMs that are capable of pumping rings across a membrane in a way similar to how bacteriorhodopsin transports protons from one side of a membrane to the other under the influence of light. Such extensive multicomponent AMMs can lead potentially to molecular transporting platforms with positional and directional control of cargo uptake and release when, and only when, instructed.
doi_str_mv 10.1021/jacs.9b08927
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title A Molecular Dual Pump
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