Spatiotemporal control and superselectivity in supramolecular polymers using multivalency

L. Albertazzi, F.J. Martinez-Veracoechea, C.M.A. Leenders, I.K. Voets, Daan Frenkel, E.W. Meijer

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

102 Citations (Scopus)
5 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Multivalency has an important but poorly understood role in molecular self-organization. We present the noncovalent synthesis of a multicomponent supramolecular polymer in which chemically distinct monomers spontaneously coassemble into a dynamic, functional structure. We show that a multivalent recruiter is able to bind selectively to one subset of monomers (receptors) and trigger their clustering along the self-assembled polymer, behavior that mimics raft formation in cell membranes. This phenomenon is reversible and affords spatiotemporal control over the monomer distribution inside the supramolecular polymer by superselective binding of single-strand DNA to positively charged receptors. Our findings reveal the pivotal role of multivalency in enabling structural order and nonlinear recognition in water-soluble supramolecular polymers, and it offers a design principle for functional, structurally defined supramolecular architectures.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)12203-12208
JournalProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (PNAS)
Volume110
Issue number30
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2013

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