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Showing papers by "Mihail Barboiu published in 2021"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Inspired by biological proteins, artificial water channels can be used to overcome the performances of traditional desalination membranes and are incorporated in composite polyamide membranes synthesized via interfacial polymerization, providing biomimetic membranes for desalinated water.
Abstract: Inspired by biological proteins, artificial water channels (AWCs) can be used to overcome the performances of traditional desalination membranes. Their rational incorporation in composite polyamide provides an example of biomimetic membranes applied under representative reverse osmosis desalination conditions with an intrinsically high water-to-salt permeability ratio. The hybrid polyamide presents larger voids and seamlessly incorporates I–quartet AWCs for highly selective transport of water. These biomimetic membranes can be easily scaled for industrial standards (>m2), provide 99.5% rejection of NaCl or 91.4% rejection of boron, with a water flux of 75 l m−2 h−1 at 65 bar and 35,000 ppm NaCl feed solution, representative of seawater desalination. This flux is more than 75% higher than that observed with current state-of-the-art membranes with equivalent solute rejection, translating into an equivalent reduction of the membrane area for the same water output and a roughly 12% reduction of the required energy for desalination. Inspired by biological models, I–quartet artificial water channels can be incorporated in composite polyamide membranes synthesized via interfacial polymerization, providing biomimetic membranes for desalination.

103 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This review gives an overview on the development of various self-assembled artificial channels in a bottom-up approach, especially their design, self-assembly behaviour, transport activity in lipid bilayer membranes, mechanism of transport and comparison with natural ion channels.
Abstract: Owing to their significant physiological functions, especially as selective relays for translocation of physiological relevant species through cellular membranes, natural ion channels play important role in the living organisms. During the last decades, the field of self-assembled ion channels has been continuously developed. Convergent multidimensional self-assembly strategies have been used for the synthesis of unimolecular channels or non-covalent self-organized channels, designed to mimic natural ion channel proteins and for which a rich array of interconverting or adaptive channel conductance states can be observed. In this review, we give an overview on the development of various self-assembled artificial channels in a bottom-up approach, especially their design, self-assembly behaviour, transport activity in lipid bilayer membranes, mechanism of transport and comparison with natural ion channels. Finally, we discuss their applications, the potential challenges facing in this field as well as future development and perspectives.

89 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, dual-imine bond crosslinking from O-carboxymethyl chitosan (CMCS) and a water soluble dynamer using a green approach was used to synthesize dynamic hydrogels.

28 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The objective of this paper is to trace back historical development and significant advancements of current reported AWCs, and reveal important structural insights and supramolecular self-assembly principles governing the selective water transport mechanisms, toward innovative AWC-based biomimetic membranes for desalination.
Abstract: Natural Aquaporin (AQP) channels are efficient water translocating proteins, rejecting ions. Inspired by this masterpiece of nature, Artificial Water Channels (AWCs) with controlled functional structures, can be potentially used to mimic the AQPs to a certain extent, offering flexible avenues toward biomimetic membranes for water purification. The objective of this paper is to trace the historical development and significant advancements of current reported AWCs. Meanwhile, we attempt to reveal important structural insights and supramolecular self-assembly principles governing the selective water transport mechanisms, toward innovative AWC-based biomimetic membranes for desalination.

24 citations



Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a hydrophobic light-driven rotary motor is functionalized with two 18-crown-6 macrocycles and incorporated into phospholipid bilayers, showing the formation of selective alkali ion channels through the membrane.
Abstract: A hydrophobic light-driven rotary motor is functionalized with two 18-crown-6 macrocycles and incorporated into phospholipid bilayers. In the presence of this molecular construct, fluorescence assays and patch clamp experiments show the formation of selective alkali ion channels through the membrane. Further, they reveal a strongly accelerated ion transport mechanism under light irradiation. This increase of the fractional ion transport activity (up to 400%) is attributed to the out-of-equilibrium actuation dynamics of the light-driven rotary motors, which help to overcome the activation energy necessary to achieve translocation of alkali ions between macrocycles along the artificial channels.

18 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, octyl-ureido-polyol artificial water channels are shown to self-assemble into hydrophilic hydroxy channels, achieving a single-channel permeability of 2.33 × 108 water molecules per second, within the same order of magnitude as the transport rates for aquaporins.
Abstract: Artificial water channels (AWCs) are known to selectively transport water, with ion exclusion. Similarly to natural porins, AWCs encapsulate water wires or clusters, offering continuous and iterative H-bonding that plays a vital role in their stabilization. Herein, we report octyl-ureido-polyol AWCs capable of self-assembly into hydrophilic hydroxy channels. Variants of ethanol, propanediol, and trimethanol are used as head groups to modulate the water transport permeabilities, with rejection of ions. The hydroxy channels achieve a single-channel permeability of 2.33 × 108 water molecules per second, which is within the same order of magnitude as the transport rates for aquaporins. Depending on their concentration in the membrane, adaptive channels are observed in the membrane. Over increased concentrations, a significant shift occurs, initiating unexpected higher water permeation. Molecular simulations probe that spongelike or cylindrical aggregates can form to generate transient cluster water pathways through the bilayer. Altogether, the adaptive self-assembly is a key feature influencing channel efficiency. The adaptive channels described here may be considered an important milestone contributing to the systematic discovery of artificial water channels for water desalination.

14 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors demonstrate that self-assembled imidazole-quartet artificial water channels (AWC) are macroscopically incorporated within industrially relevant reverse osmosis membranes.
Abstract: Membrane-based technologies have a tremendous role in water purification and desalination. Inspired by biological proteins, artificial water channels (AWCs) have been proposed to overcome the permeability/selectivity trade-off of desalination processes. Promising strategies exploiting the AWC with angstrom-scale selectivity have revealed their impressive performances when embedded in bilayer membranes. Herein, we demonstrate that self-assembled imidazole-quartet (I-quartet) AWCs are macroscopically incorporated within industrially relevant reverse osmosis membranes. In particular, we explore the best combination between I-quartet AWC and m-phenylenediamine (MPD) monomer to achieve a seamless incorporation of AWC in a defect-free polyamide membrane. The performance of the membranes is evaluated by cross-flow filtration under real reverse osmosis conditions (15 to 20 bar of applied pressure) by filtration of brackish feed streams. The optimized bioinspired membranes achieve an unprecedented improvement, resulting in more than twice (up to 6.9 L⋅m−2⋅h−1⋅bar−1) water permeance of analogous commercial membranes, while maintaining excellent NaCl rejection (>99.5%). They show also excellent performance in the purification of low-salinity water under low-pressure conditions (6 bar of applied pressure) with fluxes up to 35 L⋅m−2⋅h−1 and 97.5 to 99.3% observed rejection.

13 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, structural details that can impact the performances of biomimetic I quartets, obtained via adaptive self-assembly of alkylureido-ethylimidazoles HC4-HC18 in bilayer or polyamide (PA) membranes, are discussed.
Abstract: Artificial water channels (AWCs) and their natural aquaporin counterparts selectively transport water. They represent a tremendous source of inspiration to devise biomimetic membranes for several applications, including desalination. They contain variable water-channel constructs with adaptative architectures and morphologies. Herein, we critically discuss the structural details that can impact the performances of biomimetic I quartets, obtained via adaptive self-assembly of alkylureido-ethylimidazoles HC4-HC18 in bilayer or polyamide (PA) membranes. We first explore the performances in bilayer membranes, identifying that hydrophobicity is an essential key parameter to increase water permeability. We compare various I quartets with different hydrophobic tails (from HC4 to HC18), and we reveal that a huge increase in single-channel water permeability, from 104 to 107 water molecules/s/channel, is obtained by increasing the size of the alkyl tail. Quantitative assessment of AWC-PA membranes shows that water permeability increases roughly from 2.09 to 3.85 L m-2 h-1 bar-1, for HC4 and HC6 reverse osmosis membranes, respectively, while maintaining excellent NaCl rejection (99.25-99.51%). Meanwhile, comparable HC8 loading induces a drop of performance reminiscent of a defective membrane formation. We show that the production of nanoscale sponge-like water channels can be obtained with insoluble, low soluble, and low dispersed AWCs, explaining the observed subpar performance. We conclude that optimal solubility enabling breakthrough performance must be considered to not only maximize the inclusion and the stability in the bilayer membranes but also achieve an effective homogeneous distribution of percolated particles that minimizes the defects in hybrid polyamide membranes.

11 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This work found that siRNA act as a template in the formation of dynamic covalent polymers at low concentration in a process guided by electrostatic binding, and showed that this templated polymerization further translates into the multivalent presentation of carbohydrate ligands, which subsequently promotes cell uptake, and even cell-selective siRNA delivery.
Abstract: Dynamic covalent libraries enable exploring complex chemical systems from which bioactive assemblies can adaptively emerge through template effects. In this work, we studied dynamic covalent libraries made of complementary bifunctional cationic peptides, yielding a diversity of species from macrocycles to polymers. Although polymers are typically expressed only at high concentration, we found that siRNA act as a template in the formation of dynamic covalent polymers at low concentration in a process guided by electrostatic binding. Using a glycosylated building block, we were able to show that this templated polymerization further translates into the multivalent presentation of carbohydrate ligands, which subsequently promotes cell uptake, and even cell‐selective siRNA delivery.

10 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Dynamic constitutional frameworks (DCFs) were synthesized and screened for biofilm inhibition or disruption in the presence of Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Staphylococcus aureus as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: Dynamic constitutional frameworks (DCFs) were synthesized and screened for biofilm inhibition or disruption. They are composed of a trialdehyde core reversibly linked to a diamine PEG connector and to a variety of neutral, anionic, or cationic heads, to generate a library of DCFs to generate multivalent dendritic architectures in the presence of Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Staphylococcus aureus. The best DCFs were always polycationic and the nature of the cationic heads significantly impact the antibiofilm activity. The best antibiofilm activity was observed for DCF3B, displaying a polyethyleneimine head. A simple inactive guanidinium functional head strongly inhibited biofilm growth when assayed as a multivalent DCF3C. Using a more advanced in vitro biofilm model of chronic wound infection, DCF3C was found significantly superior than all other DCFs. These results demonstrate the versatility and effectiveness of DCFs as low cost and efficient systems for antibiofilm disruption.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a series of blank and TP5 loaded hydrogels were synthesized via reversible dual imine bonding by mixing water soluble O-carboxymethyl chitosan (CMCS) with a dynamer (Dy) prepared from Jeffamine and benzene-1,3,5-tricarbaldehyde.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, single-crystal X-ray diffraction studies on Halogen-Bonded Organic Frameworks (XBOF) formed by N---I contacts of 2,2′,7,7′-tetrapyridyl-9,9′-spirobifluorene with pentafluoroiodobenzene or the isome...
Abstract: Single-crystal X-ray diffraction studies on Halogen-Bonded Organic Frameworks (XBOF) formed by N---I contacts of 2,2′,7,7′-tetrapyridyl-9,9′-spirobifluorene with pentafluoroiodobenzene or the isome...

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Biocompatible gelatin hydrogels, double cross-linked via imine and Diels-Alder (DA) dynamic covalent frameworks, showed integrated advantages of adjustable and durable mechanical strength, good thermal stability, biocompatibility for promoting cell growth and reasonable degradable rate as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: Hydrogels constructed from natural sources have received increased attention recently, including applications in biomedical fields. They are protein or polysaccharide cross-linked scaffolds that display water retention and are able to recognize host cargos. Their excellent biocompatibility does not always combine with high mechanical strength (up to 136 kPa) and thermostability, making them less useful in biomedical applications. This paper reports biocompatible gelatin hydrogels, double cross-linked via imine and Diels-Alder (DA) dynamic covalent frameworks. They showed integrated advantages of adjustable and durable mechanical strength, good thermal stability, biocompatibility for promoting cell growth and reasonable degradable rate. These hydrogels possess remarkable self-healing property, acid/alkali resistance at 65 °C and good integrity in organic solvents at 130 °C, holding great potential for biomedical applications in the areas such as cartilage regeneration, articular reconstruction or soft robotics.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the carbonic anhydrase (CA) was considered and different approaches to regulate the activity of CA, mostly acting on the inner catalytic active site or outer microenvironment of the enzyme, leading to inhibition or activation of CA.
Abstract: In this review we consider one important member of the metalloenzymes family, the carbonic anhydrase (CA), involved in the treatment of several common diseases. Different approaches have emerged to regulate the activity of CA, mostly acting on the inner catalytic active site or outer microenvironment of the enzyme, leading to inhibition or activation of CA. In recent years, gradually increased attention has focused on the adoption of constitutional dynamic chemistry (CDC) strategies for the screening and discovery of potent inhibitors or activators. The participation of reversible covalent bonds enabled the enzyme itself to select the optimal ligands obtained from diverse building blocks with comparatively higher degree of variety, resulting in the fittest recognition of enzyme ligands from complex dynamic systems. With the increasing implementation of CDC for enzyme targets, it shows great potential for drug discovery or CO2 capture applications.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Double cross-linked dynamic hydrogels, dynagels, have been prepared through reversible imine bonds and supramolecular interactions, which showed good pH responsiveness, injectability, self-healing property and biocompatibility.
Abstract: Double cross-linked dynamic hydrogels, dynagels, have been prepared through reversible imine bonds and supramolecular interactions, which showed good pH responsiveness, injectability, self-healing property and biocompatibility. With the further encapsulation of heparin, the obtained hydrogels exhibited good anti-bacterial activity and promotion effects for 3D cell culture.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors quantify the influence of microscopic observables, such as channel radius and hydrogen bond connectivity, and of meso-scale features such as the size of self-assembly blocks, on the permeation rate of a self-assembled nanocrystal-like artificial water channel.
Abstract: Understanding water transport mechanisms at the nanoscale level remains a challenge for theoretical chemical physics. Major advances in chemical synthesis have allowed us to discover new artificial water channels, rivaling with or even surpassing water conductance and selectivity of natural protein channels. In order to interpret experimental features and understand microscopic determinants for performance improvements, numerical approaches based on all-atom molecular dynamics simulations and enhanced sampling methods have been proposed. In this study, we quantify the influence of microscopic observables, such as channel radius and hydrogen bond connectivity, and of meso-scale features, such as the size of self-assembly blocks, on the permeation rate of a self-assembled nanocrystal-like artificial water channel. Although the absolute permeation rate extrapolated from these simulations is overestimated by one order of magnitude compared to the experimental measurement, the detailed analysis of several observed conductive patterns in large assemblies opens new pathways to scalable membranes with enhanced water conductance for the future design.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the imidazole and 3-amino-triazole amphiphiles self-assemble via multiple H-bonding to form stable artificial networks within lipid bilayers.
Abstract: Transmembrane protein channels are of significant importance for the design of biomimetic artificial ion channels. Regarding the transport principles, they may be constructed from amphiphilic compounds undergoing self-assembly that synergistically generate directional superstructures across bilayer membranes. Particularly interesting, these alignments may impose an artificial pore structure that may control the ionic conduction and translocate water and ions sharing one pathway across the cell membrane. Herein, we report that the imidazole and 3-amino-triazole amphiphiles self-assemble via multiple H-bonding to form stable artificial networks within lipid bilayers. The alignment of supramolecular assemblies influences the conduction of ions, envisioned to diffuse along the hydrophilic pathways. Compounds 1-8 present subtle variations on the ion transport activities, depending the structure of hydrophilic head and hydrophobic components. Fluorinated compounds 3, 4 and 7, 8 outperform the corresponding non-fluorinated counterparts 1, 2 and 5, 6. Under the same conditions, the R enantiomers present a higher activity vs. the S enantiomers. The present systems associating supramolecular self-assembly with ion-transport behaviors may represent very promising unexplored alternatives for ion-transport along with their transient superstructures within bilayer membranes, paralleling to that of biology.

Book ChapterDOI
01 Jan 2021
TL;DR: Numerically investigating the influence of varying the dimensions of a self-assembled Imidazole I-quartet (I4) aggregate in lipid bilayers on the water permeation properties of these highly packed water channels yields some insights into modifying the current molecular designs in order to considerably improve water transport in scalable membranes.
Abstract: Nanopores that efficiently and selectively transport water have been intensively studied at the nanoscale level. A key challenge relates to linking the nanoscale to the compound’s macroscopic properties, which are hardly accessible at the smaller scale. Here we numerically investigate the influence of varying the dimensions of a self-assembled Imidazole I-quartet (I4) aggregate in lipid bilayers on the water permeation properties of these highly packed water channels. Quantitative transport studies reveal that water pathways in I4 crystal-like packing are not affected by small scaling factors, despite non-uniform contributions between central channels shielded from the bilayer and lateral, exposed channels. The permeation rate computed in simulations overestimates the experimental value by an order of magnitude, yet these in silico properties are very dependent on the force field parameters. The diversity of observed water pathways in such a small-scale in silico experiment yields some insights into modifying the current molecular designs in order to considerably improve water transport in scalable membranes.