Litcius/Paper detail

Molecular Architectonics‐guided Design of Biomaterials

Hariharan Moorthy, Lakshmi Priya Datta, Thimmaiah Govindaraju

2021Chemistry - An Asian Journal17 citationsDOI

Abstract

The quest for mastering the controlled engineering of dynamic molecular assemblies is the basis of molecular architectonics. The rational use of noncovalent interactions to programme the molecular assemblies allow the construction of diverse molecular and material architectures with novel functional properties and applications. Understanding and controlling the assembly of molecular systems are daunting tasks owing to the complex factors that govern at the molecular level. Molecular architectures depend on the design of functional molecular modules through the judicious selection of functional core and auxiliary units to guide the precise molecular assembly and co-assembly patterns. Biomolecules with built-in information for molecular recognition are the ultimate examples of evolutionary guided molecular recognition systems that define the structure and functions of living organisms. Explicit use of biomolecules as auxiliary units to command the molecular assemblies of functional molecules is an intriguing exercise in the scheme of molecular architectonics. In this minireview, we discuss the implementation of the principles of molecular architectonics for the development of novel biomaterials with functional properties and applications ranging from sensing, drug delivery to neurogeneration and tissue engineering. We present the molecular designs pioneered by our group owing to the requirement and scope of the article while acknowledging the designs pursued by several research groups that befit the concept.

Topics & Concepts

Molecular recognitionMolecular engineeringNanotechnologyRational designBiomoleculeComputer scienceMolecular machineDesign elements and principlesMaterials scienceChemistryMoleculeSoftware engineeringOrganic chemistrySupramolecular Self-Assembly in MaterialsPolydiacetylene-based materials and applicationsSupramolecular Chemistry and Complexes