Abstract
Sophisticated mechanically interlocked molecules (MIMs) with interesting structures, properties and applications have attracted great interest in the field of supramolecular chemistry. We herein report a highly efficient self-assembly of heterometallic triangular necklace 1 containing Cu and Pt metals with strong antibacterial activity. Single-crystal X-ray analysis shows that the finely arranged triangular necklace 1 has two racemic enantiomers in its solid state with intriguing packing motif. The superior antibacterial activity of necklace 1 against both standard and clinically drug-resistant pathogens implies that the presence of Cu(I) center and platinum(II) significantly enhance the bacterium-binding/damaging activity, which is mainly attributed to the highly positively charged nature, the possible synergistic effect of heterometals in the necklace, and the improved stability in culture media. This work clearly discloses the structure-property relationships that the existence of two different metal centers not only facilitates successful construction of heterometallic triangular necklace but also endows it with superior nuclease properties and antibacterial activities.
Similar content being viewed by others
Introduction
Mechanically-interlocked molecules (MIMs) such as catenanes1,2,3,4,5,6, rotaxanes7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18, molecular necklaces19,20, and molecular knots21,22 have been a main research focus in supramolecular chemistry due to their innately topologically nontrivial architectures, thus always challenging the imagination and skills of synthetic chemists23,24,25,26,27. Molecular necklaces, as important members in MIMs family, are derived from catenanes, in which three or more side rings as molecular “beads” are threaded onto a central ring as molecular “chains”28. The early research of molecular necklace could be traced back to the work reported by Sauvage et al., who generated a mixture of molecular necklaces by accident in a very low yield and characterized their structures by using electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESI-MS)29. Moreover, Stoddart et al.30,31,32, Chiu et al.33, Grubbs et al.34, and Wu et al.35 also reported a series of molecular necklaces through covalent synthesis assisted by weak donor–acceptor π–π interactions or dynamic covalent chemistry, but the yield was also relatively low. Notably, Kim and coworkers realized the highly efficient assembly of molecular necklaces by taking advantage of coordination bonds and cucurbituril-based host–guest chemistry, which is definitely a big breakthrough36,37,38. Recently, Li, Stang, and co-workers have presented the highly efficient construction of the largest molecular necklace so far through hierarchical self-assembly involving coordination interactions and the subsequent host–guest chemistry39,40.
Generally, a well-established molecular necklace is self-assembled from three main components: molecular axis as chain, macrocycle as bead and molecular linker that joints them together (Fig. 1). The prevalent strategy to design molecular necklaces is mainly based on threading and ring-closing two processes, basically driven by noncovalent interactions such as host–guest interactions, coordination bonds, dynamic covalent chemistry, etc. Obviously, metals, as the “gems” of molecular necklaces, are of great importance to the efficient synthesis of metallic necklaces41. In particular, metals in molecular necklace would not only facilitate the threading process due to their template effect but also participate in the ring-closing process via coordination-driven self-assembly42,43. Moreover, the existence of metals will bring some interesting properties and applications of the resultant necklace. However, most of the documented metallic necklaces only involve one kind metal in their architectures, and no heterometallic molecular necklace has been reported so far. Therefore, there is a high demand for the design of functionalized molecular necklaces that possess heterometal centers and intriguing properties for applications.
It’s worth-noting that, though a major breakthrough in molecular necklaces regarding to their impressive structures as well as well-developed synthetic strategy has been achieved, the study of their properties and potential applications have persistently lagged behind expectations. To the best of our knowledge, the focus of the chemistry of MIMs, especially for molecular necklaces, has still stayed on molecular design and synthesis stage. Studies involving their applications are hardly seen at present in this area. The intrinsic nature of coordination-driven self-assemblies including their high dynamic metal–ligand coordination bonds, diverse metal ions, positively charged molecular nature, together with their highly tunable coordination geometries endows them with great merits in biomedical applications44. Indeed, the biomedical applications of coordination-driven self-assembly of metallacycles and metallacages have been systematically investigated in last decade, and they can serve well as anticancer agents, drug delivery systems, biosensors, DNA intercalators, antibacterial agents and so on45,46. It is anticipated that molecular necklaces, the distinct type of metal coordination-driven self-assemblies, may also be developed for biomedical applications, especially when their biomolecule-interaction efficiency and stability are highly improved.
The emerging drug-resistant bacterial pathogens have been becoming great threats to human health, and thus provoke the development of advanced antibacterial agents47,48. The bacterial DNA, cell wall, and plasma membrane are critical components of bacterial cells essential for survival and growth49. The negatively charged property of DNA, bacterial cell wall (displaying negatively charged lipopolysaccharides or teichoic acid), and plasma membrane (exposing negatively charged phospholipids)50 indicates that they are realistic targets of the positively charged metal coordinating complexes. The coordination-driven self-assembly of the positively charged metallosupramolecular complexes just provides a powerful platform to enhance the electric charges for severely disruption of the targeted DNA/cell wall/plasma membrane, and to improve the stability for prolonging the interaction time between the necklaces and the bacterial cells. Inspired by the recent development of biomedical and biochemical applications of coordination-driven self-assembly, we envision that molecular necklaces possessing multiple metals as well as the enhanced electric charges and stability may potentially serve as efficient DNA intercalators and bacterial cell wall/plasma membrane-disrupting agents, thus opening a promising window to their biomedical applications.
In this study, we report the construction of a heterometallic triangular necklace 1 containing both Cu and Pt metals with strong antibacterial activity through a highly efficient “threading-followed-by-ring-closing” approach driven by metal ligand coordination (Fig. 1). The elegant structure of necklace 1 is successfully determined by X-ray crystallographic analysis, revealing that the finely arranged triangular necklace 1 has two racemic enantiomers in its solid state with intriguing packing motif. The existence of two different metal centers not only facilitates the successful construction of necklace 1 but also endows it with superior nuclease properties and activities. Our studies further show that the excellent antibacterial activity might be mainly attributed to the synergistic effect of heterometals in the necklace, which enhances its bacterium-binding and cell wall/plasma membrane-disrupting capacity for killing the bacterial cells.
Results
Synthesis
The major challenge for the synthesis of heterometallic molecular necklace in this study is the compatibility of the selected two coordination motifs. Therefore, two orthogonal 2,9-disubstituted Cu(I)-bis(phenanthroline)s ([Cu(phen)2]+) and platinum(II)–pyridine coordination motifs are particularly selected as they are mutually compatible, i.e., 2,9-disubstituted [Cu(phen)2]+ complex will not affect platinum(II)–pyridine coordination process51,52, probably duo to the steric hindrance53. The synthetic route to molecular necklace 1 is depicted in Fig. 2. Pseudorotaxane D1 consisting of two functional ligands of pyridine and phenanthroline was synthesized from the starting materials M1 and D2 according to a literature method54 with minor modifications (Supplementary Fig. 1). Then heterometallic triangular necklace 1 was synthesized through the straightforward coordination-driven self-assembly between pyridine donor D1 and diplatinum (II) acceptor unit A1 in nearly quantitative yield. Notably, pseudorotaxane D1 could generated in situ without the further purification. Therefore, the heterometallic triangular necklace 1 was achieved in quantitative one-pot synthesis simply by mixing M1 and D2 with A1 (Supplementary Fig. 2). More impressively, the necklace 1 could be isolated in pure form, which enables us to further study its properties and potential applications. In order to elaborate the challenge of the synthesis of heterometallic triangular necklace, some additional controlled experiments were carried out. For instance, another molecular necklace 7 through coordination-driven self-assembly between 3,8-disubstituted [Cu(phen)2]+ D5 and the corresponding diplatinum (II) acceptors A3 was proposed (Supplementary Figs. 8 and 9). However, the complicated 1H and 31P nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectrum indicated the unsuccessful self-assembly process (Supplementary Fig. 20). This indicates that not all the ligands are applicable to self-assemble to form the designed necklace, thus proving the challenge to synthesize such heterometallic molecular necklace. It indicates that 3,8-disubstituted [Cu(phen)2]+ and platinum(II)–pyridine these two coordination motifs are not compatible, i.e., the controlled experiment demonstrated that 3,8-disubstituted [Cu(phen)2]+ is likely to interfere the platinum(II)–pyridine coordination process because of the potential competing coordination reaction between platinum(II) and nitrogen in 3,8-disubstituted [Cu(phen)2]+ (Supplementary Figs. 10 and 20). For comparison, [3]catenane 2 as the analog of 1 with two [Cu(phen)2]+ units was also synthesized by using the same protocol (Supplementary Fig. 3). In order to systematically investigate the subsequent biological activity of necklace, we further synthesized a series of metallacycles featuring only platinum(II)–pyridine coordination moieties without copper metal (i.e., 3, 4, 5, and 6) for comparison (Supplementary Figs. 4–7, 21–24). 1 and 2 were well characterized with one-dimensional (1-D) NMR, two-dimensional correlation spectroscopy, diffusion-ordered NMR spectroscopy (DOSY), nuclear overhauser effect spectroscopy, and electrospray ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (ESI-TOF-MS) (Supplementary Figs. 11–19). The structure of pseudorotaxane D1 and necklace 1 were also unambiguously confirmed by X-ray crystallographic analysis.
NMR and mass characterizations
Multinuclear NMR (1H and 31P) spectroscopy was applied to characterize the structural information of the necklace 1 by comparing with the corresponding ligands. The 31P NMR spectrum of the necklace 1 displayed a sharp singlet peak at δ 14.24 ppm, which significantly shifted upfield from the starting platinum acceptor A1 by approximately 5.27 ppm (Fig. 3a). This change, as well as the decrease of 31P-195Pt coupling constant (ca. ΔJ = −212.5 Hz) is consistent with the π-back donation from the platinum atoms, indicating the successful coordination between D1 and A1. Additionally, the necklace 1 exhibited a well-resolved 1H NMR spectrum (Fig. 3b), where the protons of the pyridine rings exhibited downfield shifts (Hα: 8.27–8.75 ppm; Hβ: 6.43–6.88 ppm) resulting from the loss of electron density upon coordination of the pyridine N atom with the Pt(II) metal center. Moreover, the 2D-DOSY analysis of the necklace 1 in acetone-d6 revealed a single band at logD ≈ −8.8 (Fig. 3c). Besides, the ESI-MS-TOF mass spectrometry provided further evidence for the formation of the target interlocked assembly. In the mass spectrum of the necklace 1 (Supplementary Fig. 13), peaks at m/z = 1644.80 and 1287.21 were observed, corresponding to [M-4PF6]4+ and [M-5PF6]5+ moieties, respectively, where M represents the intact assemblies. The NMR and mass analysis of [3]catenane 2 experienced a phenomenon similar to necklace 1. Therefore, the NMR and mass results both preliminarily proved the successful construction of the necklace 1 and [3]catenane 2, verifying the rationality of the developed synthetic strategy.
Crystallographic analysis
Single crystal suitable for X-ray crystallographic analysis was obtained for pseudorotaxane D1 by slow evaporation of its acetone solution (Fig. 4a). A racemic mixture of enantiomers was found in the single crystal of D1, which is attributed to the intrinsically chiral nature of [Cu(phen)2]+ unit55. In its packing structure, multiple intramolecular and intermolecular interactions were observed. Specifically, one pyridyl face-to-face packed with intramolecular phenanthroline with a centroid-to-centroid distance of 3.813 Å, while the other pyridyl stacked with phenoxy groups of the neighboring enantiomer with centroid-to-centroid distance of 4.183 Å. Intramolecular π–π stacking between phenoxy group and phenanthroline was also observed with a centroid-to-centroid distance of 3.533 Å. Consequently, two enantiomers alternatively packed together into a column along the a axis. Typically, it is very difficult to obtain good single crystals of large cationic macrocycles based on Pt(II)-N(pyridine) coordinative bonds, not to mention such complicated molecular necklace. Fortunately, single crystal of heterometallic triangular necklace with good quality was obtained by slow diffusion of ether into acetone solution (Fig. 4b). The compound crystallizes in P-1 space group with the asymmetric unit is the whole triangular necklace 1 molecule. The large void inside the triangular necklace is filled with disordered solvents, which are removed using SQUEEZE routine of the Platon program during the crystal structure refinement56. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first time to present a quality crystal of heterometallic molecular necklace based on [3 + 3] Pt(II)-N cationic metallacycle. As shown in Fig. 4b, three polyether phenanthroline macrocycles were ideally threaded onto a [3 + 3] Pt(II)-N cationic metallacycle, thus resulting in a finely arranged triangular necklace surrounded by nine hexafluorophosphate anions. Two enantiomers were also found in the crystal of 1 on account to the orientation of [Cu(phen)2]+ unit. The size of the necklace is also very impressive with the exterior length of approximately 37 Å and internal length of approximately 15 Å, leading to a cavity with diameters of ~8 Å. Regarding to the packing motif, three [Cu(phen)2]+ units exhibited strong π–π stacking with the adjacent molecules with a centroid-to-centroid distance of 4.427 Å. As a result, every triangular molecule in solid state was arranged very closely to each other and stacked in a stagger packing mode, thereinto two enantiomers in each layer was alternatively aligned. The casual discovery of the chirality in molecular necklace would enrich the recent development of chiral chemistry in MIMs such as rotaxanes and catenanes57. The above results also highlight that the stoichiometry and position of Cu(I)-contained donor and the Pt(II)-contained acceptor unit can be precisely integrated into the well-defined molecular necklace in such coordination-driven self-assembly process, which is of high importance to the following biomedical applications.
DNA-cleaving and antibacterial activities
DNA, a double helix carrying the genetic instructions, is of high importance for most of organisms. DNA is the primary target for most of anticancer drugs and anti-infection agents58. Investigations on DNA cleavage and developments of efficient chemical nucleases have attracted wide interest owing to their potential applications as promising therapeutic agents as well as diagnostic structural probes to analyze DNA information. Among all the chemical nucleases reported so far, transition metal complexes have obvious advantages because metal complexes with natural cationic character particularly favor the redox, hydrolysis and other photoreactions, thus leading to strong affinity to DNA59,60. For example, [Cu(phen)2]+ units have been widely studied as chemical nucleases for highly efficient DNA cleavage since the redox properties of the metal could not only promote the reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation but also have strong noncovalent interactions with DNA61. Recent studies have demonstrated that ditopic coordination compound containing copper and platinum centers displayed some intriguing nuclease properties with the enhanced DNA cleavage efficiency62,63,64,65. However, very few mechanically-interlocked molecules, especially molecular necklaces, have demonstrated their application prospects in this area66,67. On this basis, the study of the nuclease properties and application in DNA cleavage of the designed heterometallic molecular necklace 1 is of great interest. The DNA-cleavage of necklace 1 was then first systematically studied and compared with the above designed [3]catenane 2, metallacycles 3–6, pseudorotaxane D1 as well as di-Pt(II) acceptors A1 and A2. Indeed, DNA cleavage assay revealed that both the molecular necklace 1 and [3]catenane 2 had much higher DNA cleavage activity than the donor D1, the acceptors A1 and A2, and the metallacycles 3, 4, 5 and 6 (Supplementary Fig. 25). Especially, necklace 1 led to thorough DNA degradation in 10 min when their concentrations reached up to 6 μM, indicating the higher cleavage activity than [3]catenane 2 (Supplementary Fig. 26). The DNA cleavage activity of necklace 1 was also observed in the 1-treated bacterial cells, which showed remarkable intracellular DNA fragmentation as compared to the control cells (Supplementary Fig. 27). These results implied that necklace 1 might have the highest biological activity among the tested molecules. Meanwhile, the Cu(I)-containing molecule D1, rather than the Cu(I)-free molecules (i.e., A1, A2, 3, 4, 5, and 6), also led to obvious DNA degradation, but its DNA cleavage efficiency was much lower than the necklace (Supplementary Fig. 25). This observation indicated that Cu(I) plays a critical role in DNA cleavage by the necklace, and its efficiency was remarkably enhanced by the Pt(II)-containing acceptor.
Strong DNA cleavage activity of the coordination complexes commonly indicates high antibacterial ability68,69,70. Moreover, recent studies have further unveiled some interesting findings that metallacycles and metallacages exhibited strong cell wall (together with plasma membrane)-intercalating ability and antibacterial activity44,45,46,71. Considering the fact that molecular necklace 1 has combinational positive charges, π–π stacking ability, platinum(II)–pyridine coordination and [Cu(phen)2]+ units, we speculate that it may possess strong antibacterial activity. The positively charged molecular necklace 1 might possess antibacterial activity owing to its binding with the negatively charged components of the cell wall/plasma membrane, e.g., liposaccharides (LPS) and phospholipids. The binding ability of the molecular necklace to the bacterial cells was then investigated by both glass-adhering test and dynamic light scattering (DLS) analysis using the well-known bacterial pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Confocal observation of the 4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI)-stained cells on the glass surfaces revealed that the glass surface coated with the necklace 1 could bind abundant bacterial cells, while the surfaces coated with [3]catenane 2 or the metallacycles 3–6 only had weak bacterial binding ability (Fig. 5a). Fluorescence intensity quantification further indicated that 1 could bind 1-fold more bacterial cells than [3]catenane 2, and 2–3-fold more cells than the metallacycles without copper metals (Supplementary Fig. 28). DLS analysis of the molecule-bacteria interaction suspension further showed that necklace 1 led to the higher size distribution of the bacterial groups (from 620–1980 nm to 3760–4400 nm) than that of [3]catenane 2 (to 750–3548 nm), indicating much more severe cell aggregation caused by the binding of 1 (Supplementary Fig. 29a). In contrast, the metallacycles 3–6 without copper metals had no remarkable effect on the size distribution of the bacterial groups (Supplementary Fig. 29b), confirming the important role of the molecular necklace on cell binding ability. Moreover, 1-coated glass could adsorb much higher levels of LPS than other complexes (Fig. 5b). These observations suggested that the heterometallic necklace 1 featured strong bacterial binding ability, which is most likely because the necklace 1 has more positive charges and consequently stronger interaction with the cell wall LPS.
The strong binding of the heterometallic necklace with the bacterial cells might result in severe plasma membrane damage and consequent cell death. We then used the 5(6)-carboxyl fluorescein (CF)-leakage model to evaluate the ability of the molecular necklace to damage the plasma membrane72,73,74. Expectedly, while [3]catenane 2 and the metallacycles 3–6 only led to weak and slow CF release (<30% even after 90 min) from the 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DOPC) liposomes, the heterometallic necklace 1 caused drastic CF release (~70% in 15 min, and >80% after 90 min) (Fig. 5c), indicating the strong plasma membrane-damaging ability of 1.
Owing to the strong bacterium-binding and cell membrane-damaging ability of necklace 1, we expected that it may severely kill the bacterial cells. Colony forming unit assays showed that, while [3]catenane 2 and the metallacycles 3–6, together with their donor D1, the Cu+ precursor Cu(MeCN)4PF6, and the acceptors (A1 and A2), only caused a decrease in cell viability to 30–65%, the heterometallic necklace 1 could kill almost all of the bacterial cells (Fig. 5d, e, Supplementary Fig. 30). Statistical analysis also revealed that necklace 1 had much lower IC50 against the bacterial cells than that of the other complexes (Supplementary Table 1). More importantly, heterometallic necklace 1, as compared to the control complexes, also showed excellent antibacterial activity to the clinically isolated drug-resistant pathogens, such as the ciprofloxacin/penicillin double-resistant P. aeruginosa strain (IC50 = 3.98 μM), the penicillin/tetracycline Escherichia coli strain (IC50 = 1.84 μM), and the multidrug-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) strain (IC50 = 5.16 μM), indicating that it may be a superior candidate of antibacterial agents for fighting against multidrug-resistant pathogens.
An interesting observation is that all of the Cu(I)-containing molecules (i.e., 1, 2, D1, and Cu(MeCN)4PF6) had higher antibacterial activity than the Cu(I)-free molecules (i.e., 3, 4, 5, 6, A1, and A2) (Fig. 5d, Supplementary Fig. 30, Table S1). In addition, we also found that all of the Cu(I)-containing molecules have remarkably stronger LPS-binding and membrane-damaging ability than the other molecules (Supplementary Fig. 31). These results indicated that Cu(I) plays an important role in killing bacterial cells by enhancing the interaction between 1 and the cell membrane components. Notably, only the cooperation of the Cu(I)-contained donor and the Pt(II)-contained acceptor in the necklace 1 generated the highest cell wall/plasma membrane-binding/damaging and bacterial killing ability since the Cu(I)-free matallacycle 4 and the Pt(II)-free donor D1 exhibited much lower antibacterial capacity than necklace 1 (Fig. 5, Supplementary Fig. 30).
Coordination-driven formation of the necklace 1 framework is also critical for efficiently killing the pathogens. To prove this contribution, a control experiment was carried out. The antibacterial activities of the ligand mixtures of D1 + A1′ or D1 + A2′ have been surveyed. Notably, the physical blends of D1 + A1′ or D1 + A2′ could not self-assemble into the necklace since Pt was protected by iodide or bromide moieties. It was found that, compared to the necklace 1, the mixtures of D1 + A1′ or D1 + A2′ exhibited much weaker bacterium-killing efficiency (Supplementary Fig. 32). These results further implied the significance of necklace formation in bacterial killing. From the above discussion, we may conclude that stoichiometric Cu(I)-contained donor and the Pt(II)-contained acceptor can be precisely integrated into the platform of necklace 1, which is highly conducive to its outstanding bacterial killing ability.
The strong antibacterial activity of the heterometallic necklace 1 was related to severe bacterial cell death. Specifically, confocal observation of the DAPI/propidium iodide (PI) double stained cells revealed that the necklace 1 induced severe cell aggregation and caused almost thorough cell death (indicated by the PI-positive cells with red fluorescence) (Fig. 5f). In contrast, [3]catenane 2 and the metallacycles 3–6 did not cause obvious cell aggregation and only led to partial cell death (Fig. 5f). Similarly, SEM observation showed that heterometallic necklace 1 resulted in much more severe corruption of the cell structures than other complexes (Fig. 5g), confirming drastic cell death induced by necklace 1. Interestingly, the cells of each group shared the similar levels of intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) (Supplementary Fig. 33), excluding the possible contribution of ROS accumulation to the difference in the antibacterial ability of all tested species.
The contribution of cell wall/plasma membrane disruption in bactericidal activity of the necklace 1 was further confirmed by cell surface distribution of the necklace 1 and ultrathin section observations of the bacterial cells (Fig. 6a, b). Energy dispersive spectroscopy mapping showed that both Cu and Pt were abundantly accumulated on the cell surface and co-localized with the cellular elements (e.g., O, N, and P) (Fig. 6a), indicating the direct contact between the necklace and the cell surface. TEM observations of the bacterial ultrathin sections further revealed that the control cells had intact cell wall and plasma membrane embracing the cytoplasm (Fig. 6b). In contrast, most of the necklace-treated cells experienced severely cell wall/plasma membrane disruption and consequent cytoplasm leakage from the disrupted sites (Fig. 6b), emphasizing the critical role of direct contact between the necklace 1 and the bacterial cell wall/plasma membrane components in bacterial death. In addition, severe DNA fragmentation was observed in necklace 1-treated cells (Supplementary Fig. 27), implying that DNA cleavage caused by internalized necklace 1 was also involved in its antibacterial performance. Taken together, these results revealed that the heterometallic necklace 1 possessing more positive charges and two metal centers featured much stronger bacterium-binding activity and superior cell wall/plasma membrane/DNA-disrupting capacity than the control complexes, which might be mainly attributed to the synergistic combination of heterometals in the necklace (Fig. 6c).
The stability of necklace 1 and other assemblies in bacterial culture media is certainly worth considering. We then studied their stabilities under a variety of conditions by in situ 1H NMR and 31P NMR spectroscopy. The preliminary results demonstrated that all assemblies including necklace 1 are relatively stable towards different pH and tryptone, which is used as a nitrogen source in culture media, as indicated by the unchanged 1H NMR and 31P NMR spectra after adding N,N-Diisopropylethylamine, triflic acid (TfOH), or tryptone (Supplementary Figs. 37–40). However, all assemblies would be disassembled in Luria–Bertani (LB) medium because their 31P NMR spectra became complicated when adding LB medium after 1 h (Supplementary Fig. 41). For comparison, the time dependent 31P NMR spectra of necklace 1 and metallacycle 4 were recorded and their degradation curves are shown in Supplementary Fig. 42. The results revealed that necklace 1 had a higher resistance to LB medium compared to metallacycle 4, e.g., on the one hand, the intact metallacycle 4 remained less than 10% of its initial content after 3 min while necklace 1 still kept about 50%; on the other hand, metallacycle 4 was thoroughly destructed within 9 min while a much longer time (~45 min) was needed for necklace 1 to be completely degraded. The enhancement of the stability towards LB medium for necklace 1 was probably due to its aggregation, which decreases its exposed molecular surface area and protects it from LB medium. The stability of coordination-driven self-assembly is essentially related to the intrinsic dynamic nature of metal-ligand coordination chemistry75. Based on large amounts of investigation and research on stimuli-responsive metal–ligand assemblies76,77, we believe that the degradation of necklace 1 probably stems from the ions such as chloride ion in LB medium (Supplementary Figs. 43–50). Obviously, coordination-driven formation of necklace 1 architecture rendered the molecule more stable in biological systems than other metallacycles, and hence prolonged the time of necklace 1-bacterium interaction to sufficiently kill bacterial cells.
Together, these results indicate that Cu(I) and Pt(II) in necklace 1 in combination play essential roles in bacterial killing: (1) Cu(I) functions in bacterial binding to the cell wall/plasma membrane and disrupts their ultra-structures, together with in promoting DNA cleavage; (2) Pt(II) enhances the biomolecule-interaction capacity of Cu(I) to more efficiently disrupt targeted cell components, e.g., lipopolysaccharides, phospholipids, and DNA; (3) Stoichiometric Cu(I)-contained donor and the Pt(II)-contained acceptor can be precisely integrated into the architecture of necklace 1, which thus enhances the bacterial binding/damaging capacity and stability of the necklace.
Discussion
In summary, a heterometallic triangular necklace 1 was successfully synthesized through a “threading-followed-by-ring-closing” approach driven by coordination interaction. The crystal structure of 1 disclosed an elegant triangular necklace architecture containing a large [3 + 3] Pt(II)-N cationic metallacycle interlocked with three polyether phenanthroline macrocycles. The existence of two different metal centers not only facilitated the successful construction of necklace 1 but also endowed it with superior nuclease properties and antibacterial activities. Our studies revealed that the self-assembly of heterometallic necklace would significantly enhance its bactericidal activity. This enhancement might be mainly attributed to the synergistic effect of heterometals in the necklace, endowing it superior bacterium-binding and cell wall/plasma membrane-disrupting capacity for killing the bacterial cells. “Threading-followed-by-ring-closing” approach combining with coordination-driven self-assembly would allow us to further construct more complicated molecular necklaces in the future. And the promising DNA cleavage and antibacterial activities results obtained herein would also attract broad interests and provide directions for future chemical design in this field.
Methods
The synthesis and characterization of new compounds present in this work, and the experimental details and additional data of DNA cleavage, bacterium-binding and antimicrobial tests are described in the Supplementary Information.
Data availability
The data that support the findings of this study are available from the authors on reasonable request, see author contributions for specific data sets. The X-ray crystallographic coordinates for structures reported in this study have been deposited at the Cambridge Crystallographic Data Center (CCDC), under deposition numbers CCDC 1889123 (D1) and 1889124 (1). These data can be obtained free of charge from The Cambridge Crystallographic Data Center via www.ccdc.cam.ac.uk/data_request/cif.
References
Niu, Z. & Gibson, H. W. Polycatenanes. Chem. Rev. 109, 6024–6046 (2009).
Evans, N. H. & Beer, P. D. Progress in the synthesis and exploitation of catenanes since the millennium. Chem. Soc. Rev. 43, 4658–4683 (2014).
Gil-Ramírez, G., Leigh, D. A. & Stephens, A. J. Catenanes: fifty years of molecular links. Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 54, 6110–6150 (2015).
Li, S. H., Zhang, H. Y., Xu, X. & Liu, Y. Mechanically selflocked chiral gemini-catenanes. Nat. Commun. 6, 7590 (2015).
Wu, Q. et al. Poly[n]catenanes: synthesis of molecular interlocked chains. Science 358, 1434–1439 (2017).
Sauvage, J. P. From chemical topology to molecular machines (Nobel Lecture). Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 56, 11080–11093 (2017).
Nepogodiev, S. A. & Stoddart, J. F. Cyclodextrin-based catenanes and rotaxanes. Chem. Rev. 98, 1959–1976 (1998).
Bruns, C. J. & Stoddart, J. F. Rotaxane-based molecular muscles. Acc. Chem. Res. 47, 2186–2199 (2014).
Durola, F. et al. Cyclic [4]rotaxanes containing two parallel porphyrinic plates: toward switchable molecular receptors and compressors. Acc. Chem. Res. 47, 633–645 (2014).
Xue, M., Yang, Y., Chi, X., Yan, X. & Huang, F. Development of Pseudorotaxanes and rotaxanes: from synthesis to stimuli-responsive motions to applications. Chem. Rev. 115, 7398–7501 (2015).
Wang, W. et al. Organometallic rotaxane dendrimers with fourth-generation mechanically interlocked branches. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 112, 5597–5601 (2015).
Tian, J. et al. Supramolecular metal-organic frameworks that display high homogeneous and heterogeneous photocatalytic activity for H2 production. Nat. Commun. 7, 11580 (2016).
Meng, Z., Xiang, J. F. & Chen, C. F. Directional molecular transportation based on a catalytic stopper-leaving rotaxane system. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 138, 5652–5658 (2016).
Altmann, P. J. & Pöthig, A. Pillarplexes: a metal-organic class of supramolecular hosts. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 138, 13171–13174 (2016).
Zhu, K., Baggi, G. & Loeb, S. J. Ring-through-ring molecular shuttling in a saturated [3]rotaxane. Nat. Chem. 10, 625–630 (2018).
Wang, X. Q. et al. Dual stimuli-responsive rotaxane-branched dendrimers with reversible dimension modulation. Nat. Commun. 9, 3190 (2018).
Zhang, Q. et al. Muscle-like artificial molecular actuators for nanoparticles. Chem 4, 2670–2684 (2018).
Ke, H. et al. Shear-induced assembly of a transient yet highly stretchable hydrogel based on pseudopolyrotaxanes. Nat. Chem. 11, 470–477 (2019).
Kim, K. Mechanically interlocked molecules incorporating cucurbituril and their supramolecular assemblies. Chem. Soc. Rev. 31, 96–107 (2002).
Erbas-Cakmak, S. et al. Rotary and linear molecular motors driven by pulses of a chemical fuel. Science 358, 340–343 (2017).
Fielden, S. D. P., Leigh, D. A. & Woltering, S. L. Molecular knots. Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 56, 11166–11194 (2017).
Zhang, L. et al. Stereoselective synthesis of a composite knot with nine crossings. Nat. Chem. 10, 1083–1088 (2018).
Sauvage, J.-P. & Dietrich-Buchecker, C. Molecular Catenanes, Rotaxanes and Knots. A Journey through the World of Molecular Topology (Wiley, Hoboken, 2007).
Beves, J. E., Blight, B. A., Campbell, C. J., Leigh, D. A. & McBurney, R. T. Strategies and tactics for the metal-directed synthesis of rotaxanes, knots, catenanes, and higher order links. Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 50, 9260–9327 (2011).
Bruns, C. J. & Stoddart, J. F. The Nature of the Mechanical Bond: From Molecules to Machines (Wiley, Hoboken, 2016).
Denis, M. & Goldup, S. M. The active template approach to interlocked molecules. Nat. Rev. Chem. 1, 1–18 (2017).
Sluysmans, D. & Stoddart, J. F. The burgeoning of mechanically interlocked molecules in chemistry. Trends Chem. 1, 185–197 (2019).
Whang, D., Park, K. M., Heo, J., Ashton, P. & Kim, K. Molecular necklace: quantitative self-assembly of a cyclic oligorotaxane from nine molecules. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 120, 4899–4900 (1998).
Bitsch, F., Dietrich-Buchecker, C. O., Khémiss, A. K., Sauvage, J. P. & Van Dorsselaer, A. Multiring interlocked systems: structure elucidation by electrospray mass spectrometry. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 113, 4023–4025 (1991).
Amabilino, D. B., Ashton, P. R., Stoddart, J. F., White, A. J. P. & Williams, D. J. Kinetic and thermodynamic effects in the self-assembly of [3]catenanes in the solution and solid states. Chemistry 4, 460–468 (1998).
Chiu, S. H. et al. Making molecular-necklaces from rotaxanes. Tetrahedron 58, 807–814 (2002).
Nguyen, M. T., Ferris, D. P., Pezzato, C., Wang, Y. & Stoddart, J. F. Densely charged dodecacationic [3]- and tetracosacationic radial [5]catenanes. Chem 4, 2329–2344 (2018).
Chang, C. F. et al. Using host-guest complexation to fold a flexible linear organic string: kinetically controlled syntheses of [3]catenanes and a five-membered molecular necklace. Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 51, 10094–10098 (2012).
Clark, P. G., Guidry, E. N., Chan, W. Y., Steinmetz, W. E. & Grubbs, R. H. Synthesis of a molecular charm bracelet via click cyclization and olefin metathesis clipping. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 132, 3405–3412 (2010).
Dasgupta, S. & Wu, J. Template-directed synthesis of kinetically and thermodynamically stable molecular necklace using ring closing metathesis. Org. Biomol. Chem. 9, 3504–3515 (2011).
Roh, S.-G. et al. Synthesis of a five-membered molecular necklace: a 2+2 approach. Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 38, 637–641 (1999).
Park, K. M. et al. Designed self-assembly of molecular necklaces. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 124, 2140–2147 (2002).
Ko, Y. H. et al. Designed self-assembly of molecular necklaces using host-stabilized charge-transfer interactions. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 126, 1932–1933 (2004).
Li, S. et al. Self-assembly of triangular and hexagonal molecular necklaces. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 136, 5908–5911 (2014).
Ye, Y. et al. Self-assembly of [3]catenanes and a [4]molecular necklace based on a cryptand/paraquat recognition motif. Org. Lett. 17, 2804–2807 (2015).
Lewis, J. E. M., Beer, P. D., Loeb, S. J. & Goldup, S. M. Metal ions in the synthesis of interlocked molecules and materials. Chem. Soc. Rev. 46, 2577–2591 (2017).
Cook, T. R. & Stang, P. J. Recent developments in the preparation and chemistry of metallacycles and metallacages via coordination. Chem. Rev. 115, 7001–7045 (2015).
Chen, L. J. & Yang, H. B. Construction of stimuli-responsive functional materials via hierarchical self-assembly involving coordination interactions. Acc. Chem. Res. 51, 2699–2710 (2018).
Cook, T. R., Vajpayee, V., Lee, M. H., Stang, P. J. & Chi, K.-W. Biomedical and biochemical applications of self-assembled metallacycles and metallacages. Acc. Chem. Res. 46, 2464–2474 (2013).
Sepehrpour, H., Fu, W., Sun, Y. & Stang, P. J. Biomedically relevant self-assembled metallacycles and metallacages. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 141, 14005–14020 (2019).
Gao, S. et al. Membrane intercalation-enhanced photodynamic inactivation of bacteria by a metallacycle and TAT-decorated virus coat protein. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 116, 23437–23443 (2019).
Willyard, C. The drug-resistant bacteria that pose the greatest health threats. Nature 543, 15 (2017).
Brown, E. D. & Wright, G. D. Antibacterial drug discovery in the resistance era. Nature 529, 336–343 (2016).
Brown, L., Wolf, J. M., Prados-Rosales, R. & Casadevall, A. Through the wall: extracellular vesicles in Gram-positive bacteria, mycobacteria and fungi. Nat. Rev. Microbiol. 13, 620–630 (2015).
Egan, A. J., Cleverley, R. M., Peters, K., Lewis, R. J. & Vollmer, W. Regulation of bacterial cell wall growth. FEBS J. 284, 851–867 (2017).
Saha, M. L., De, S., Pramanik, S. & Schmittel, M. Orthogonality in discrete self-assembly – survey of current concepts. Chem. Soc. Rev. 42, 6860–6909 (2013).
Wu, G. Y. et al. Supramolecular polymer cross-linked by discrete tris-[2]pseudorotaxane metallacycles and its redox-responsive behavior. Inorg. Chem. 57, 15414–15420 (2018).
Schmittel, M. et al. Cap for copper(I) ions! Metallosupramolecular solid and solution state structures on the basis of the dynamic tetrahedral [Cu(phenAr2)(py)2]+ motif. Inorg. Chem. 48, 8192–8200 (2009).
Alvariño, C., Simond, D., Lorente, P. M., Besnard, C. & Williams, A. F. Chains, necklaces and weaving chain-link grids from self-assembly reactions. Chemistry 21, 8851–8858 (2015).
Cetin, M. M. et al. Characterization and photocatalytic behavior of 2,9-di(aryl)−1,10-phenanthroline copper(I) complexes. Dalton Trans. 46, 6553–6569 (2017).
Sheldrick, G. M. Crystal structure refinement with SHELXL. Acta Cryst. C71, 3–8 (2015).
Jamieson, E. M. G., Modicom, F. & Goldup, S. M. Chirality in rotaxanes and catenanes. Chem. Soc. Rev. 47, 5266–5311 (2018).
Hurley, L. H. DNA and its associated processes as targets for cancer therapy. Nat. Rev. Cancer 2, 188–200 (2002).
Metcalfe, C. & Thomas, J. A. Kinetically inert transition metal complexes that reversibly bind to DNA. Chem. Soc. Rev. 32, 215–224 (2003).
Suntharalingam, K. & Vilar, R. Interaction of metal complexes with nucleic acids. Annu. Rep. Prog. Chem. Sect. A 107, 339–358 (2011).
Sigman, D. S., Mazumder, A. & Perrin, D. M. Chemical nucleases. Chem. Rev. 93, 2295–2316 (1993).
De Hoog, P. et al. New approach for the preparation of efficient DNA cleaving agents: ditopic copper-platinum complexes based on 3-clip-phen and cisplatin. J. Med. Chem. 50, 3148–3152 (2007).
Dong, X. et al. Promotive effect of the platinum moiety on the DNA cleavage activity of copper-based artificial nucleases. Inorg. Chem. 49, 2541–2549 (2010).
Ng, N. S. et al. The antimicrobial properties of some copper(ii) and platinum(ii) 1,10-phenanthroline complexes. Dalt. Trans. 42, 3196–3209 (2013).
Liu, C., Wang, M., Zhang, T. & Sun, H. DNA hydrolysis promoted by di- and multi-nuclear metal complexes. Coord. Chem. Rev. 248, 147–168 (2004).
Mishra, A. et al. DNA binding and unwinding by self-assembled supramolecular heterobimetallacycles. Organometallics 30, 6343–6346 (2011).
Casini, A., Woods, B. & Wenzel, M. The promise of self-assembled 3D supramolecular coordination complexes for biomedical applications. Inorg. Chem. 56, 14715–14729 (2017).
Liu, H. K. & Sadler, P. J. Metal complexes as DNA intercalators. Acc. Chem. Res. 44, 349–359 (2011).
Kumaravel, G., Ponya Utthra, P. & Raman, N. Exploiting the biological efficacy of benzimidazole based Schiff base complexes with L-Histidine as a co-ligand: combined molecular docking, DNA interaction, antimicrobial and cytotoxic studies. Bioorg. Chem. 77, 269–279 (2018).
Kalaiarasi, G. et al. New binuclear Ni(ii) metallates containing ONS chelators: synthesis, characterisation, DNA binding, DNA cleavage, protein binding, antioxidant activity, antimicrobial and in vitro cytotoxicity. N. J. Chem. 41, 2543–2560 (2017).
Wang, H. et al. Supramolecular Kandinsky circles with high antibacterial activity. Nat. Commun. 9, 1815 (2018).
Gao, J., Zhang, O., Ren, J., Wu, C. & Zhao, Y. Aromaticity/bulkiness of surface ligands to promote the interaction of anionic amphiphilic gold nanoparticles with lipid bilayers. Langmuir 32, 1601–1610 (2016).
Foster, B., Larios, M. & Smith, V. Investigation of the effects of titanium dioxide and cerium oxide nanoparticles on liposomes using fluorescent dye leakage. FASEB J. 30, lb74 (2016).
Liu, Y. & Liu, J. Zn2+ induced irreversible aggregation, stacking, and leakage of choline phosphate liposomes. Langmuir 33, 14472–14479 (2017).
Lehn, J. M. From supramolecular chemistry towards constitutional dynamic chemistry and adaptive chemistry. Chem. Soc. Rev. 36, 151–160 (2007).
McConnell, A. J., Wood, C. S., Neelakandan, P. P. & Nitschke, J. R. Stimuli-responsive metal–ligand assemblies. Chem. Rev. 115, 7729–7793 (2015).
Li, Z.-Y. et al. Cross-linked supramolecular polymer gels constructed from discrete multi-pillar[5]arene metallacycles and their multiple stimuli-responsive behavior. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 136, 8577–8589 (2014).
Acknowledgements
H.-B.Y. thanks NSFC/China (Nos. 21572066 and 21625202), Innovation Program of Shanghai Municipal Education Commission (No. 2019-01-07-00-05-E00012), and Program for Changjiang Scholars and Innovative Research Team in University for financial support. X.S. acknowledges the financial supports sponsored by Shanghai Sailing Program (19YF1412900) and the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities. Q.Y. thanks NSFC/China (Nos. 31870139). We thank Dr. Yiwen Wang and Dr. Bing Ni for the TEM study.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Contributions
H.-B.Y., X.S., Q.Y., and G.-Y.W. conceived the project, analyzed the data, and wrote the manuscript. G.-Y.W. performed the most of experiments. H.P., H.Q., and X.-L.Z. conducted single crystal analyses. Y.-X.Hu., G.-Q.Y., X.L., and L.X. helped in experiments and data analyses.
Corresponding authors
Ethics declarations
Competing interests
The authors declare no competing interests.
Additional information
Peer review information Nature Communication thanks the anonymous reviewer for their contributions to the peer review of this work. Peer review reports are available.
Publisher’s note Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Supplementary information
Rights and permissions
Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons license and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
About this article
Cite this article
Wu, GY., Shi, X., Phan, H. et al. Efficient self-assembly of heterometallic triangular necklace with strong antibacterial activity. Nat Commun 11, 3178 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-16940-z
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-16940-z
This article is cited by
-
Mechanically interlocked networks cross-linked by a molecular necklace
Nature Communications (2022)
Comments
By submitting a comment you agree to abide by our Terms and Community Guidelines. If you find something abusive or that does not comply with our terms or guidelines please flag it as inappropriate.