Peptide hydrogen-bonded organic frameworks

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Abstract

Hydrogen-bonded porous frameworks (HPFs) are versatile porous crystalline frameworks with diverse applications. However, designing chiral assemblies or biocompatible materials poses significant challenges. Peptide-based hydrogen-bonded porous frameworks (P-HPFs) are an exciting alternative to conventional HPFs due to their intrinsic chirality, tunability, biocompatibility, and structural diversity. Flexible, ultra-short peptide-based P-HPFs (composed of 3 or fewer amino acids) exhibit adaptable porous topologies that can accommodate a variety of guest molecules and capture hazardous greenhouse gases. Longer, folded peptides present challenges and opportunities in designing P-HPFs. This review highlights recent developments in P-HPFs using ultra-short peptides, folded peptides, and foldamers, showcasing their utility for gas storage, chiral recognition, chiral separation, and medical applications. It also addresses design challenges and future directions in the field.

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Vijayakanth, T., Dasgupta, S., Ganatra, P., Rencus-Lazar, S., Desai, A. V., Nandi, S., … Misra, R. (2024, March 7). Peptide hydrogen-bonded organic frameworks. Chemical Society Reviews. Royal Society of Chemistry. https://doi.org/10.1039/d3cs00648d

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