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SCIENCE
INDEX
2000
2001
2002
Atmospheric Sciences
Artificial antibodies
created by new molecular imprinting process
James
E. Kloeppel, Physical Sciences Editor
(217) 244-1073; kloeppel@uiuc.edu
7/24/02
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| Molecular
model of imprinted dendrimer prior to removal of the template.
The template, a porphyrin can be seen in gray at the center
of the polymer. |
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
Nature is especially adept at producing molecules that can recognize
and bind other molecules. For example, antibody molecules will search
out and bind a single foreign molecule, called an antigen, from among
myriad other natural substances. This type of exquisite molecular recognition
has long inspired chemists, who for decades have tried to make molecules
that are capable of performing similar feats.
Now, a team of chemists at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign,
led by professors Steven C. Zimmerman and Kenneth S. Suslick, has developed
a way of creating artificial antibodies. The process which they
describe in the July 25 issue of the journal Nature is a general
approach wherein one molecule imprints its structure within a larger
host molecule, in much the same way an object can cast its own shape
in plaster of paris.
"This is the first example of molecular imprinting in which a single
molecular template is imprinted into a single macromolecule a
highly branched polymer called a dendrimer," said Zimmerman, a
William H. and Janet Lycan Professor of Chemistry at Illinois. "Upon
removal of the template, we have a synthetic molecular shell that can
bind specifically shaped molecules and reject all others, just like
a natural antibody."
The process Zimmerman and Suslick describe is analogous to Linus Paulings
1940 proposal for how antibodies are formed in response to the presence
of an antigen. Although Paulings mechanism proved to be incorrect,
it inspired considerable experimental work, which ultimately led to
the modern field of polymer imprinting.
One disadvantage of conventional polymer imprinting is that each "antigen"
or template molecule produces an artificial antibody containing all
kinds of different binding sites, most of which have poor recognition
abilities and are therefore ineffective.
"Using dendrimers for imprinting one molecule against another is
much faster and more efficient," Zimmerman said. "And, having
a single binding site within a single polymer means we can more easily
separate the good imprints from the bad."
To make their molecular molds, the researchers begin by attaching wedge-shaped
molecules called dendrons to a porphyrin core to create a dendrimer.
The flexible dendrimer scaffolding is then cross-linked in a chemical
reaction that stitches together the end-groups of the dendrons. Lastly,
a hydrolysis reaction chemically clips out the core, leaving a hollow
space that can selectively and tightly bind appropriately shaped molecules.
"The technique is similar to the lost wax process used in metal
casting," said Suslick, also a William H. and Janet Lycan Professor
of Chemistry at Illinois. "In essence, we are molding this dendrimer
around our template and creating a rigid cast that functions like a
molecular lock for a molecular key."
The technique should be applicable to many molecules and a host of molecular
recognition tasks. Potential applications include organic catalysts,
medical diagnostics, and sensors for various pollutants and chemical
warfare agents.
"Right now, we have a conceptual advance," Zimmerman said.
"Weve shown theres a new approach that can imprint
a single molecule within a single molecule. Ultimately, we envision
taking a template, and in a single step growing the scaffolding that
can then be linked together to make a rigid mold."
In addition to Zimmerman and Suslick, collaborators on the project were
graduate students Michael Wendland and Neal Rakow (both now at 3M) and
Ilya Zharov, a postdoctoral research associate at the universitys
Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology. The National
Institutes of Health and the U.S. Army Research Office funded the work.
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