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  • DNA self-assembly has previously been used to create channel-like structures that can penetrate through lipid bilayer membranes. However, such assemblies have not been shown to cause cell death before. Now a DNA nanopore has been shown to exert a cytotoxic effect when administered to cells.

    • Swati Krishnan
    • Friedrich C. Simmel
    News & Views
  • A combined experimental and theoretical study of the biosynthesis of a family of antibacterial natural products has uncovered some of the finer details of unusual stereoselectivity observed in a peptide cyclization.

    • Bryan Jones
    • Romas J. Kazlauskas
    News & Views
  • Developing cleaner chemical processes often involves sophisticated flow-chemistry equipment that is not available in many economically developing countries. For reactions where it is the data that are important rather than the physical product, the networking of chemists across the internet to allow remote experimentation offers a viable solution to this problem.

    • Ryan A. Skilton
    • Richard A. Bourne
    • Martyn Poliakoff
    Commentary
  • The maximum attainable capacity of the Li–O2 battery is limited by the passivation of its cathode by electronically insulating Li2O2. It is now shown that electrolyte additives, which activate solution-mediated growth of Li2O2, make it possible to circumvent this fundamental limitation, leading to design rules for additive selection.

    • Nagaphani B. Aetukuri
    • Bryan D. McCloskey
    • Alan C. Luntz
    Article
  • Amines are essential in a number of research areas, but a general, selective and step-efficient synthesis has been elusive. Now, the use of a single copper catalyst to transform alkynes into enamines, α-chiral branched alkylamines, and linear alkylamines is described. These transformations have been applied in the preparation of a selection of current pharmaceutical agents.

    • Shi-Liang Shi
    • Stephen L. Buchwald
    Article
  • The mammalian oocyte cell cycle is regulated by massive zinc fluxes which culminate in coordinated ejections of ~1010 zinc ions at fertilization. Four single-cell physiochemical approaches (live-cell fluorescence imaging, scanning transmission electron microscopy with energy dispersive spectroscopy, X-ray fluorescence microscopy and tomography) reveal that these ‘zinc sparks’ originate from thousands of cortical vesicles which each release ~106 zinc ions.

    • Emily L. Que
    • Reiner Bleher
    • Thomas V. O'Halloran
    Article
  • Creating chemical systems that can model living systems is far from easy. However, the evolution of oil droplets in water through the application of artificial selective pressure to produce droplets with dramatically different — yet specific — behaviours, is an encouraging step in this direction.

    • Andrew J. Bissette
    • Stephen P. Fletcher
    News & Views
  • Peptides that self-assemble into nanostructures are of interest for many applications, including ones relevant to cosmetics, food, biomedicine and nanotechnology. Now, computational tools have been developed that enable peptide sequence space to be rapidly searched for supramolecular properties and this approach has been used to identify unprotected tripeptide hydrogelators.

    • Pim W. J. M. Frederix
    • Gary G. Scott
    • Tell Tuttle
    Article
  • Crystals of hexachlorobenzene easily break when pressed on the (100) face, but bend to 360° without disintegrating when stress is applied on the (001) face. In the latter case this extraordinary malleability arises from the segregation and sliding of layers of molecules in the crystal, a process in which halogen–halogen interactions are broken and reformed.

    • Manas K. Panda
    • Soumyajit Ghosh
    • Panče Naumov
    Article
  • A method for rapidly screening small-molecule inhibitors of amyloid assembly has been developed. This method uses electrospray ionization–ion mobility spectrometry–mass spectrometry to detect and identify the type of inhibition. A screen of this nature could help in the discovery of therapeutics for numerous diseases associated with aberrant protein aggregation.

    • Lydia M. Young
    • Janet C. Saunders
    • Alison E. Ashcroft
    Article
  • Gas sorption and separation in porous materials is dependent on the host–guest binding within any given system. Now, the molecular details of cooperative binding between small hydrocarbons and a metal–organic framework, NOTT-300, at multiple sites have been elucidated by complementary scattering and diffraction techniques. This material is also capable of separating C1 and C2 hydrocarbons under ambient conditions.

    • Sihai Yang
    • Anibal J. Ramirez-Cuesta
    • Martin Schröder
    Article
  • The stereochemical outcome of enzyme-catalysed reactions with physiological substrates is typically governed by the well-defined geometry of the enzyme active site. Now, a rare example is reported where the substrate controls the stereoselectivity of a Michael-type addition during lanthipeptide biosynthesis.

    • Weixin Tang
    • Gonzalo Jiménez-Osés
    • Wilfred A. van der Donk
    Article
    • Gavin Armstrong
    Research Highlights
  • Molecular simulations have the potential to give valuable insights into experimental results, but can be limited by the time- and length-scales they can simulate. Now, reactive chemistry can be driven through a novel simulation approach, which could have ramifications for many research areas, including astrobiology and the origins of life.

    • Nir Goldman
    News & Views
  • Enhancing the structural diversity of peptide natural products relies on synthetic modifications that are typically not chemo- or regioselective. A nonribosomal peptide synthetase has now been engineered to incorporate a non-natural amino acid containing a reactive bio-orthogonal handle.

    • Jaclyn M. Winter
    • Yi Tang
    News & Views
  • Rotaxanes with cyclodextrin end groups have been used as a platform to investigate anion binding in water, revealing that halogen bonding can serve as the basis for molecular recognition in aqueous solvents, which may have implications in medicinal chemistry and beyond.

    • Mark S. Taylor
    News & Views