New Surface Can Find Different Twists on a Molecular Theme
Researchers have created a new process to produce materials that can sift through similar, molecular brethren and latch onto chemicals that differ from each other in only their mirrored images.
If it proves effective in large-scale experiments, the stable, relatively simple catalyst could impact the $100 billion pharmaceutical industry by helping sort biologically potent chemicals from related, yet less useful or even toxic, compatriots.
Jay Switzer and colleagues at the University of Missouri at Rolla announce their discovery in the October 2, 2003, issue of the journal Nature. The research was funded primarily by the Division of Chemistry and the Division of Material Research at the National Science Foundation (NSF), the independent federal agency that supports research and education across all fields of science and engineering.
The new material, a thin film of copper oxide on a layer of gold, has an inherent “handedness.” Just as human hands come in a left and right-handed variety, so do some molecules. “Its just like the difference between shaking hands between a right- or left-handed person,” said NSF program officer and chemistry expert Mike Clarke. “The handclasp is much easier if its right-right or left-left, and harder if its right-left or left-right.” The handedness property, called “chirality,” is fundamentally related to how the molecule reacts with other substances.
Approximately one-third of all drugs are chiral, says Switzer, and the top-10 list for these products includes such familiar brand names as Lipitor, Zocor, Paxil, Zoloft, and Nexium-all of which yield sales of over $1 billion a year.
Currently, most industries make bulk quantities of chiral molecules by mixing handed molecules and other chemicals in a solution. “The hands gather atoms, assembling chiral, molecular gloves,” said chemist Katherine Covert, one of the NSF program officers who oversees funding of Switzers research.
“But, separating the useful gloves from the chemicals that assembled them can be a difficult process,” she added.
Switzer and his colleagues have created a material that serves as a bank of “hands,” a solid structure on which reactions can occur and from which researchers can more easily separate desirable chemicals.
To do this, the group used tartrate, a common substance that often crystallizes on the bottom of wine corks. In 1848, when Louis Pasteur was 26, he used tweezers to separate right- and left-handed forms of sodium ammonium tartrate under a microscope.
“The crystals have a different shape,” said Switzer. “When Pasteur dissolved the crystals in water, one set rotated polarized light to the right, and the other form rotated it to the left. This experiment is usually cited as the discovery of chirality in molecules,” he added.
Tartrate was therefore the first molecule ever isolated in right handed and left-handed forms, which chemists now refer to as the R (from the Latin rectus) and S (from the Latin sinister) forms.
“Weve made a material that is entirely chiral, not just the surface,” said Switzer. “In earlier experiments, you would modify a surface with a chiral modifying agent, and if the agent washes off, the surface is no longer effective. In our new research, the film itself is chiral-the effectiveness remains even after many chemical reactions,” he added.
To create the new catalyst, the researchers immersed gold in a liquid containing copper and the handed chemical tartrate, while applying an electric current to the system. The electricity caused copper oxide to bond to the gold. The technique is much like the simple electroplating used to produce the shiny chrome on automobiles.
The gold atoms were highly organized in a crystal structure, but the structure was symmetrical and did not affect the final handedness of the material. Instead, the chiral structure of the tartrate molecules caused the copper oxide to bind to the gold layer-by-layer and in an oriented fashion, creating a handed film.
Once the copper oxide film forms, the copper and oxygen atoms are tightly attached and exist as a single material. In initial tests, the researchers have shown the material can differentiate between chiral tartrate without breaking down or being permanently altered. Pending tests will apply the same technique to amino acids and sugars, such as glucose.
Now, Switzer and his colleagues hope to use their process to create new catalysts and separate different chemicals. In addition to numerous industry uses, the researchers hope similar catalysts may eventually be modified to create sensors for security applications.
Switzer is supported by NSF through both the Division of Chemistry and the Division of Materials Research.
Trademarks for prescription drug names that appear in this press release – Lipitor, Zocor, Paxil, Zoloft, and Nexium – are the trademarks of their respective owners.
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