The ability to modulate the physical properties of a supramolecular hydrogel may be beneficial for biomaterial and biomedical applications. We find that guanosine (G 1), when combined with 0.5 equiv of potassium borate, forms a strong, self-supporting hydrogel with elastic moduli >10 kPa. The countercation in the borate salt (MB(OH)4) significantly alters the physical properties of the hydrogel. The gelator combination of G 1 and KB(OH)4 formed the strongest hydrogel, while the weakest system was obtained with LiB(OH)4, as judged by 1H NMR and rheology. Data from powder XRD, 1H double-quantum solid-state magic-angle spinning (MAS) NMR and small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) were consistent with a structural model that involves formation of borate dimers and G4·K+ quartets by G 1 and KB(OH)4. Stacking of these G4·M+ quartets into G4-nanowires gives a hydrogel. We found that the M+ cation helps stabilize the anionic guanosine-borate (GB) diesters, as well as the G4-quartets. Supplementing the standard gelator mixture of G 1 and 0.5 equiv of KB(OH)4 with additional KCl or KNO3 increased the strength of the hydrogel. We found that thioflavin T fluoresces in the presence of G4·M+ precursor structures. This fluorescence response for thioflavin T was the greatest for the K+ GB system, presumably due to the enhanced interaction of the dye with the more stable G4·K+ quartets. The fluorescence of thioflavin T increased as a function of gelator concentration with an increase that correlated with the systems gel point, as measured by solution viscosity.
CITATION STYLE
Peters, G. M., Skala, L. P., Plank, T. N., Oh, H., Manjunatha Reddy, G. N., Marsh, A., … Davis, J. T. (2015). G4-quartet·M+ borate hydrogels. Journal of the American Chemical Society, 137(17), 5819–5827. https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.5b02753
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