Chemical mimicry of viral capsid self-assembly
- 26 December 2007
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 104 (52) , 20731-20736
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0709489104
Abstract
Stable structures of icosahedral symmetry can serve numerous functional roles, including chemical microencapsulation and delivery of drugs and biomolecules, epitope presentation to allow for an efficient immunization process, synthesis of nanoparticles of uniform size, observation of encapsulated reactive intermediates, formation of structural elements for supramolecular constructs, and molecular computing. By examining physical models of spherical virus assembly we have arrived at a general synthetic strategy for producing chemical capsids at size scales between fullerenes and spherical viruses. Such capsids can be formed by self-assembly from a class of molecules developed from a symmetric pentagonal core. By designing chemical complementarity into the five interface edges of the molecule, we can produce self-assembling stable structures of icosahedral symmetry. We considered three different binding mechanisms: hydrogen bonding, metal binding, and formation of disulfide bonds. These structures can be designed to assemble and disassemble under controlled environmental conditions. We have conducted molecular dynamics simulation on a class of corannulene-based molecules to demonstrate the characteristics of self-assembly and to aid in the design of the molecular subunits. The edge complementarities can be of diverse structure, and they need not reflect the fivefold symmetry of the molecular core. Thus, self-assembling capsids formed from coded subunits can serve as addressable nanocontainers or custom-made structural elements.Keywords
This publication has 40 references indexed in Scilit:
- Stabilization of Labile Carbonyl Addition Intermediates by a Synthetic ReceptorScience, 2007
- Anion mediated structural motifs in silver(i) complexes with corannuleneOrganic & Biomolecular Chemistry, 2004
- Density Functional Theory Study on the Effect of Substitution and Ring Annelation to the Rim of CorannuleneThe Journal of Organic Chemistry, 2004
- “Unlock-Lock” Approach to [2] and [3]Rotaxanes: Entering of a Ring through Disulfide Linkage That is Unlocked by Thiol “Key”Chemistry Letters, 2000
- Thermodynamic Synthesis of Rotaxanes by Imine ExchangeOrganic Letters, 1999
- Rotaxane Formation under Thermodynamic ControlOrganic Letters, 1999
- Synthesis, Structure, and Ring Conversion of 1,2-Dithiete and Related CompoundsThe Journal of Organic Chemistry, 1998
- The Discovery of Crown Ethers (Noble Lecture)Angewandte Chemie International Edition in English, 1988
- The Design of Molecular Hosts, Guests, and Their Complexes (Nobel Lecture)Angewandte Chemie International Edition in English, 1988
- Dibenzo[ghi,mno]fluorantheneJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1966