Cooperativity and selectivity in chemomechanical polyethylenimine, gels

被引:14
|
作者
Kato, Kazuaki
Schneider, Hans-Joerg [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Saarland, FR Org Chem, D-66041 Saarbrucken, Germany
[2] Univ Tokyo, Dept Adv Mat Sci, Chiba 277, Japan
关键词
D O I
10.1021/la701365t
中图分类号
O6 [化学];
学科分类号
0703 ;
摘要
Gel particles obtained from polyethylenimine (PEI) cross-linked with 10% ethylene glycol diglycidyl ether show considerable selectivity in size changes if exposed to solutions of different effector compounds. Monocarboxylic acids induce contractions of, e.g., -9% for benzoate and -40% for 2-naphthoate (all values in one dimension such as length). With diacids, the contractions increase to -29% for 1,4-benzene and -68% for 2,6-naphthalene disulfonate, indicating the significant contributions of noncovalent ionic cross-linking and of interactions with aromatic residues. A striking cooperativity is observed if aromatic compounds such as naphthoic acid are used simultaneously with amino acids as effectors. The combination with, e.g., 2-naphthoic acid and phenylalanine induces, e.g., 69% contraction, whereas the single effector compounds induce only 40% and 8%, respectively. As expected with contraction of chemomechanical polymers, the kinetics of effector absorption is significantly slower than that of the size changes, which take, e.g., 5 min to reach one-half of the final contraction; with smaller gel particles, the rates are significantly increased. Gravimetric determinations show that release of solvation water is largely responsible for the observed volume contractions. Copper or zinc ions induce small contractions, also in experiments with PEI solutions, but show no evidence of cooperativity in combination with amino acids or peptides. MAS NMR spectra of the gels induced by aromatic effector compounds exhibited moderate upfield shifts of the polymer backbone signals, as a result of ring current effects.
引用
收藏
页码:10741 / 10745
页数:5
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Tetra-Sensitive Graft Copolymer Gels as Active Material of Chemomechanical Valves
    Graefe, David
    Frank, Philipp
    Erdmann, Tim
    Richter, Andreas
    Appelhans, Dietmar
    Voit, Brigitte
    ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES, 2017, 9 (08) : 7565 - 7576
  • [22] Synchronous volume and color self-oscillating gels based on chemomechanical coupling
    Ren, Jie
    Tao, Li
    He, Jihong
    Zhang, Aixia
    Yang, Wu
    JOURNAL OF POLYMER RESEARCH, 2017, 25 (02) : 1 - 6
  • [23] Synchronous volume and color self-oscillating gels based on chemomechanical coupling
    Jie Ren
    Li Tao
    Jihong He
    Aixia Zhang
    Wu Yang
    Journal of Polymer Research, 2018, 25
  • [24] Cooperativity and Site Selectivity in the Ileal Lipid Binding Protein
    Turpin, Eleanor R.
    Fang, Huey-Jen
    Thomas, Neil R.
    Hirst, Jonathan D.
    BIOCHEMISTRY, 2013, 52 (27) : 4723 - 4733
  • [25] Degradation of Protein Kinases: Ternary Complex, Cooperativity, and Selectivity
    Grigglestone, Claire E.
    Yeung, Kap-Sun
    ACS MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY LETTERS, 2021, 12 (11): : 1629 - 1632
  • [26] Selectivity, cooperativity, and competition in the binding of heterocyclic diamidines to DNA
    Winkle, Stephen
    Hassan, Alexandra
    Rodriguez, Diana
    Vega, Christina
    Winkle, Cassandra
    ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2015, 249
  • [27] Mechanism of dimer selectivity and binding cooperativity of BRAF inhibitors
    Clayton, Joseph
    Romany, Aarion
    Matenoglou, Evangelia
    Gavathiotis, Evripidis
    Poulikakos, Poulikos I.
    Shen, Jana
    ELIFE, 2025, 13
  • [28] SELECTIVITY AND COOPERATIVITY IN THE BINDING OF CALCIUM-IONS BY PECTINS
    GARNIER, C
    AXELOS, MAV
    THIBAULT, JF
    CARBOHYDRATE RESEARCH, 1994, 256 (01) : 71 - 81
  • [29] SELECTIVITY OF CELLULOSE GELS FOR SIMPLE SALTS
    BROWN, W
    CHITUMBO, K
    JOURNAL OF CHROMATOGRAPHY, 1971, 63 (02): : 478 - &
  • [30] Post polymer modification of polyethylenimine with citrate esters: selectivity and hydrophobicity
    Waggel, Justine
    Mathers, Robert T.
    RSC ADVANCES, 2016, 6 (67) : 62884 - 62889