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DTSTART:20220414T120000Z
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SUMMARY:Séminaire Damien Baigl
DESCRIPTION:ENS Paris\nReconfigurable self-assembly: evolutive DNA nanomachines, coffee-ring diagnostics and living crystals\n\nSelf-assembly is a both a formidable method to organize molecular or colloidal entities into functional superstructures and a playground for the scientific endeavor on how matter organizes itself. Self-assembly is also a key-feature of how life builds its components. However, compared to their living counterparts, synthetic materials made by self-assembly usually lack some of the characteristic properties of living systems such as reconfigurability, adaptability or evolution.\n\nIn this presentation, I will describe different systems where such properties can emerge from self-assembled synthetic materials. First, I will show that elaborate user-defined DNA nanostructures (e.g., DNA origamis, tiles, extended nanogrids) can be obtained by spontaneous self-assembly at room temperature for the first time with a unique capability to adapt to their environment by changing their shape, transforming and evolving [1,2]. Then, I will present a new DNA self-assembly principle that does not rely on base-pairing principles. I will show in particular that photosensitive DNA intercalating molecules can co-assemble with DNA bases to form new extended supramolecular materials of unprecedented properties. I will describe in particular the formation of photoswitchable 3D crystals with unique photoreversible growth and light-gated fluorescence [3].\n\nFinally, I will present different colloidal self-assembly processes at air-water or liquid-liquid interfaces and explore how dynamic properties can emerge from such systems. Starting from the familiar situation of drying drop containing a colloidal suspensions, we have been interested in controlling/cancelling the so-called “coffee-ring effect” [4-7] or turning it into a low-cost yet powerful medical diagnostic tool [8]. In such systems, however, particles adsorb atthe interface to form amorphous structures. This led us to invent a simple method in which bulk particles adsorb at the water-interface and directly crystallize there. Based on the use of ultralow amounts of surfactant, 2D colloidal crystals spontaneously form without any other applied force than their own weight [9]. This method allows us to crystallize a broad variety of nanometric and micrometric particles, including those made of polymers, metals or inorganic materials, and tune the characteristics of the colloidal crystals [10]. These colloidal crystals display intense structural colors as well as, under some conditions, some remarkable dynamic properties at the air/water interface. For instance, using light, we can reversibly melt/crystallize these colloidal assemblies on command, evidencing interesting life-like properties, such as dissipative or living crystallization [11,12].\n\nReferences\n\n[1] Rossi-Gendron et al., ChemRxiv 2022 (preprint), doi : 10.26434/chemrxiv-2022-12jqs\n[2] Nakazawa et al., Angew. Chem. Int. Ed.2021, 60, 15214 –15219\n[3] Zhou et al., J. Am. Chem. Soc.2019, 141, 9321–9329\n[4] Anyfantakis et al., Angew. Chem. Int. Ed.2014, 53, 14077–14081\n[5] Varanakkottu et al., Nano Lett.2016, 16, 644–650\n[6] Poulichet et al., J. Colloid. Interf. Sci.2020, 573, 370-375\n[7] Galy et al., ACS Appl. Mater. Interfaces2022, 14, 3374–3384\n[8] Devineau et al., J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2016, 138, 11623–11632\n[9] Anyfantakis, Langmuir2018, 34, 15526−15536\n[10] Vialetto et al., Nanoscale2020, 12, 6279-6284\n[11] Vialetto et al. Angew. Chem. Int. Ed.2019, 58, 9145-9149\n[12] Vialetto et al., J. Am. Chem. Soc.2021, 143, 11535−11543\n
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<p data-index="0">ENS Paris</p>
<h3 data-index="0">Reconfigurable self-assembly: evolutive DNA nanomachines, coffee-ring diagnostics and living crystals</h3>
<div data-index="0"></div>
<div id="pageContainer1" class="_page_ysiwt_100 " data-index="0">Self-assembly is a both a formidable method to organize molecular or colloidal entities into functional superstructures and a playground for the scientific endeavor on how matter organizes itself. Self-assembly is also a key-feature of how life builds its components. However, compared to their living counterparts, synthetic materials made by self-assembly usually lack some of the characteristic properties of living systems such as reconfigurability, adaptability or evolution.</div>
<div data-index="0"></div>
<div class="_page_ysiwt_100 " data-index="0">In this presentation, I will describe different systems where such properties can emerge from self-assembled synthetic materials. First, I will show that elaborate user-defined DNA nanostructures (e.g., DNA origamis, tiles, extended nanogrids) can be obtained by spontaneous self-assembly at room temperature for the first time with a unique capability to adapt to their environment by changing their shape, transforming and evolving [1,2]. Then, I will present a new DNA self-assembly principle that does not rely on base-pairing principles. I will show in particular that photosensitive DNA intercalating molecules can co-assemble with DNA bases to form new extended supramolecular materials of unprecedented properties. I will describe in particular the formation of photoswitchable 3D crystals with unique photoreversible growth and light-gated fluorescence [3].</div>
<div data-index="0"></div>
<div class="_page_ysiwt_100 " data-index="0">Finally, I will present different colloidal self-assembly processes at air-water or liquid-liquid interfaces and explore how dynamic properties can emerge from such systems. Starting from the familiar situation of drying drop containing a colloidal suspensions, we have been interested in controlling/cancelling the so-called “coffee-ring effect” [4-7] or turning it into a low-cost yet powerful medical diagnostic tool [8]. In such systems, however, particles adsorb atthe interface to form amorphous structures. This led us to invent a simple method in which bulk particles adsorb at the water-interface and directly crystallize there. Based on the use of ultralow amounts of surfactant, 2D colloidal crystals spontaneously form without any other applied force than their own weight [9]. This method allows us to crystallize a broad variety of nanometric and micrometric particles, including those made of polymers, metals or inorganic materials, and tune the characteristics of the colloidal crystals [10]. These colloidal crystals display intense structural colors as well as, under some conditions, some remarkable dynamic properties at the air/water interface. For instance, using light, we can reversibly melt/crystallize these colloidal assemblies on command, evidencing interesting life-like properties, such as dissipative or living crystallization [11,12].</div>
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<div class="_page_ysiwt_100 " data-index="0"><strong>References</strong></div>
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<div class="_page_ysiwt_100 " data-index="0">[1] Rossi-Gendron et al., ChemRxiv 2022 (preprint), doi : 10.26434/chemrxiv-2022-12jqs</div>
<div class="_page_ysiwt_100 " data-index="0">[2] Nakazawa et al., Angew. Chem. Int. Ed.2021, 60, 15214 –15219</div>
<div class="_page_ysiwt_100 " data-index="0">[3] Zhou et al., J. Am. Chem. Soc.2019, 141, 9321–9329</div>
<div class="_page_ysiwt_100 " data-index="0">[4] Anyfantakis et al., Angew. Chem. Int. Ed.2014, 53, 14077–14081</div>
<div class="_page_ysiwt_100 " data-index="0">[5] Varanakkottu et al., Nano Lett.2016, 16, 644–650</div>
<div class="_page_ysiwt_100 " data-index="0">[6] Poulichet et al., J. Colloid. Interf. Sci.2020, 573, 370-375</div>
<div class="_page_ysiwt_100 " data-index="0">[7] Galy et al., ACS Appl. Mater. Interfaces2022, 14, 3374–3384</div>
<div class="_page_ysiwt_100 " data-index="0">[8] Devineau et al., J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2016, 138, 11623–11632</div>
<div class="_page_ysiwt_100 " data-index="0">[9] Anyfantakis, Langmuir2018, 34, 15526−15536</div>
<div class="_page_ysiwt_100 " data-index="0">[10] Vialetto et al., Nanoscale2020, 12, 6279-6284</div>
<div class="_page_ysiwt_100 " data-index="0">[11] Vialetto et al. Angew. Chem. Int. Ed.2019, 58, 9145-9149</div>
<div class="_page_ysiwt_100 " data-index="0">[12] Vialetto et al., J. Am. Chem. Soc.2021, 143, 11535−11543</div>

URL:https://lpcno.insa-toulouse.fr/events/seminaire-damien-baigl/
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