Control of seed formation allows two distinct self-sorting patterns of supramolecular nanofibers

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Abstract

Self-sorting double network hydrogels comprising orthogonal supramolecular nanofibers have attracted attention as artificially-regulated multi-component systems. Regulation of network patterns of self-sorted nanofibers is considered as a key for potential applications such as optoelectronics, but still challenging owing to a lack of useful methods to prepare and analyze the network patterns. Herein, we describe the selective construction of two distinct self-sorting network patterns, interpenetrated and parallel, by controlling the kinetics of seed formation with dynamic covalent oxime chemistry. Confocal imaging reveals the interpenetrated self-sorting network was formed upon addition of O-benzylhydroxylamine to a benzaldehyde-tethered peptide-type hydrogelator in the presence of lipid-type nanofibers. We also succeed in construction of a parallel self-sorting network through deceleration of seed formation using a slow oxime exchange reaction. Through careful observation, the formation of peptide-type seeds and nanofibers is shown to predominantly occur on the surface of the lipid-type nanofibers via highly dynamic and thermally-fluctuated processes.

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Kubota, R., Nagao, K., Tanaka, W., Matsumura, R., Aoyama, T., Urayama, K., & Hamachi, I. (2020). Control of seed formation allows two distinct self-sorting patterns of supramolecular nanofibers. Nature Communications, 11(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-17984-x

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