For the development of nature-inspired chiral nanostructures, controlling the chirality communication along the assembling pathways in aqueous media is a crucial task. Herein, we designed and synthesized pyrazine-based derivative Pyra-Met with an L-methionine group as a chiral handle. Due to the presence of flexible side chains in the Pyra-Met building block, its interactions with the solvent molecules in the assembled state are restricted, which leads to the generation of nanospheres in aqueous media. The Pyra-Met nanospheres selectively interact with Au 3 + ions to generate dynamic helical fibers of the Pyra-Met:Au 3 + ensemble with 'hidden' chirality. Finally, superhelices with the desired helical sense are achieved in the presence of L/ D-methionine via a co-assembly process. This work presents a feasible strategy to achieve the desired handedness of supramolecular assemblies for better understanding of chirality translation in supramolecular chemistry and it highlights the importance of fine tailoring of building block to control the morphology of the assembled architecture.
For the development of nature-inspired chiral nanostructures, controlling the chirality communication along the assembling pathways in aqueous media is a crucial task. Herein, we designed and synthesized pyrazine-based derivative Pyra-Met with an L-methionine group as a chiral handle. Due to the presence of flexible side chains in the Pyra-Met building block, its interactions with the solvent molecules in the assembled state are restricted, which leads to the generation of nanospheres in aqueous media. The Pyra-Met nanospheres selectively interact with Au 3 + ions to generate dynamic helical fibers of the Pyra-Met:Au 3 + ensemble with 'hidden' chirality. Finally, superhelices with the desired helical sense are achieved in the presence of L/ D-methionine via a co-assembly process. This work presents a feasible strategy to achieve the desired handedness of supramolecular assemblies for better understanding of chirality translation in supramolecular chemistry and it highlights the importance of fine tailoring of building block to control the morphology of the assembled architecture.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.