能源景观
分子
连接器
化学物理
亚稳态
最大值和最小值
小分子
化学
结晶学
共价键
构象变化
吸附
纳米技术
立体化学
材料科学
有机化学
吸附
数学
数学分析
操作系统
生物化学
计算机科学
作者
Alexandros P. Katsoulidis,Dmytro Antypov,George F. S. Whitehead,Elliot J. Carrington,Dave J. Adams,Neil G. Berry,George R. Darling,Matthew S. Dyer,Matthew J. Rosseinsky
出处
期刊:Nature
[Nature Portfolio]
日期:2019-01-01
卷期号:565 (7738): 213-217
被引量:226
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41586-018-0820-9
摘要
Metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) are crystalline synthetic porous materials formed by binding organic linkers to metal nodes: they can be either rigid1,2 or flexible3. Zeolites and rigid MOFs have widespread applications in sorption, separation and catalysis that arise from their ability to control the arrangement and chemistry of guest molecules in their pores via the shape and functionality of their internal surface, defined by their chemistry and structure4,5. Their structures correspond to an energy landscape with a single, albeit highly functional, energy minimum. By contrast, proteins function by navigating between multiple metastable structures using bond rotations of the polypeptide6,7, where each structure lies in one of the minima of a conformational energy landscape and can be selected according to the chemistry of the molecules that interact with the protein. These structural changes are realized through the mechanisms of conformational selection (where a higher-energy minimum characteristic of the protein is stabilized by small-molecule binding) and induced fit (where a small molecule imposes a structure on the protein that is not a minimum in the absence of that molecule)8. Here we show that rotation about covalent bonds in a peptide linker can change a flexible MOF to afford nine distinct crystal structures, revealing a conformational energy landscape that is characterized by multiple structural minima. The uptake of small-molecule guests by the MOF can be chemically triggered by inducing peptide conformational change. This change transforms the material from a minimum on the landscape that is inactive for guest sorption to an active one. Chemical control of the conformation of a flexible organic linker offers a route to modifying the pore geometry and internal surface chemistry and thus the function of open-framework materials. A new metal–organic framework has several conformational degrees of freedom that can be modified by the external chemical environment to change the structure and trigger the uptake of a guest molecule.
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