R_www.nanowerk.com 2015 0000359.txt

#Membrane transport-A molecular'straw'Getting water across lipid membranes is not easy. In nature, molecules called aquaporins, discovered in the 1990s, move water from one side of a biological membrane to another, but the molecules are fragile and bulky. Now, researchers from the A*STAR Institute of Bioengineering and Nanotechnology have synthesized a much smaller molecule, which behaves like a olecular drinking strawand which may have applications in water purification and elsewhere. For some years, Huaqiang Zeng of the Institute of Bioengineering and Nanotechnology has led a team aiming to produce tubular molecules that could pipe water across membranes. In 2012 they created molecules that stacked into a helical tube; unfortunately, this tube was not particularly good at holding water in its central tunnel. Undeterred, Zeng team set out to modify that molecule. Substituting a carboxyphenyl group for a carboxybenzyl group was just what was needed once again the molecules stacked into a helix, but this time it comfortably held a tringof water molecules. he continuous one-dimensional ater chaintrapped by the molecules is indispensable for mediating water transport across a lipid membrane, says Zeng. But early experiments attempting to use osmotic pressure to drive water through the trawinto a membrane-bound compartment (vesicle) drew a blank. e repeatedly failed to demonstrate the water-transporting ability of the molecule when using a sodium chloride concentration gradient, he says. espite my skepticism, we proceeded to investigate whether a proton gradient could induce water transport. We were surprised very to find that it could. The system is known the first example of roton gradient inducedwater transport. am not aware of any other man-made or natural system that does this, says Zeng. t seems to be without precedent. Zeng explains that the team olecular strawbeats the naturally occurring aquaporins in a number of ways. It is 40 times lighter, has a higher thermal stability, is expected to scale up more easily for industrial applications and retains its functionality better when inserted into biomimetic membranes. Zeng thinks this and derivative molecules, may become ext-generation nanofiltration membranes for water purification applications, including seawater desalination and wastewater reclamation. He says that osmotic agents often have to be at concentrations exceeding 100 millimolar to drive water movement in forward osmosis nanofiltration. f a proton gradient is used as the driving force instead, the concentration difference needed would be exceedingly small.""Zeng says.""This would translate into huge energy savings on an industrial scale. l


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