Abstract
A family of self-replicating macrocycles was developed using dynamic combinatorial chemistry. Replication is driven by self-assembly of the replicators into fibrils and relies critically on mechanically induced fibril fragmentation. Analysis of separate dynamic combinatorial libraries made from one of six peptide-functionalized building blocks of different hydrophobicity revealed two selection criteria that govern the emergence of replicators from these systems. First, the replicators need to have a critical macrocycle size that endows them with sufficient multivalency to enable their self-assembly into fibrils. Second, efficient replication occurs only for library members that are of low abundance in the absence of a replication pathway. This work has led to spontaneous emergence of replicators with unrivalled structural complexity, being built from up to eight identical subunits and reaching a MW of up to 5.6 kDa. The insights obtained in this work provide valuable guidance that should facilitate future discovery of new complex self-replicating molecules. They may also assist in the development of new self-synthesizing materials, where self-assembly drives the synthesis of the very molecules that self-assemble. To illustrate the potential of this concept, the present system enables access to self-assembling materials made from self-synthesizing macrocycles with tunable ring size ranging from trimers to octamers.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 18406-18417 |
Number of pages | 12 |
Journal | Journal of the American Chemical Society |
Volume | 135 |
Issue number | 49 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 11-Dec-2013 |
Keywords
- PEPTIDE SELF-REPLICATION
- DEPENDENT EXPONENTIAL AMPLIFICATION
- DIELS-ALDER REACTION
- SUPRAMOLECULAR CHEMISTRY
- AROMATIC INTERACTIONS
- SYNTHETIC REPLICATOR
- FIBRIL FORMATION
- CROSS-CATALYSIS
- LIGASE RIBOZYME
- RNA ENZYME