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Hierarchical Self-Assembly and Multidynamic Responsiveness of Fluorescent Dynamic Covalent Networks Forming Organogels
Author(s) -
Esteban SuárezPicado,
Maëva Coste,
JeanYves Runser,
Mathieu Fossepré,
Alain Carvalho,
Mathieu Surin,
Loı̈c Jierry,
Sébastien Ulrich
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
biomacromolecules
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.689
H-Index - 220
eISSN - 1526-4602
pISSN - 1525-7797
DOI - 10.1021/acs.biomac.1c01389
Subject(s) - fluorophore , fluorescence , covalent bond , chemistry , cysteine , hydrazone , self assembly , context (archaeology) , hydrazide , photochemistry , aggregation induced emission , combinatorial chemistry , nanotechnology , biophysics , materials science , organic chemistry , paleontology , physics , quantum mechanics , biology , enzyme
Smart stimuli-responsive fluorescent materials are of interest in the context of sensing and imaging applications. In this project, we elaborated multidynamic fluorescent materials made of a tetraphenylethene fluorophore displaying aggregation-induced emission and short cysteine-rich C-hydrazide peptides. Specifically, we show that a hierarchical dynamic covalent self-assembly process, combining disulfide and acyl-hydrazone bond formation operating simultaneously in a one-pot reaction, yields cage compounds at low concentration (2 mM), while soluble fluorescent dynamic covalent networks and even chemically cross-linked fluorescent organogels are formed at higher concentrations. The number of cysteine residues in the peptide sequence impacts directly the mechanical properties of the resulting organogels, Young's moduli varying 2500-fold across the series. These materials underpinned by a nanofibrillar network display multidynamic responsiveness following concentration changes, chemical triggers, as well as light irradiation, all of which enable their controlled degradation with concomitant changes in spectroscopic outputs─self-assembly enhances fluorescence emission by ca. 100-fold and disassembly quenches fluorescence emission.

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