Publication | Closed Access
Guanosine Hydrogen‐Bonded Scaffolds: A New Way to Control the Bottom‐Up Realisation of Well‐Defined Nanoarchitectures
140
Citations
106
References
2009
Year
Supramolecular AssemblyEngineeringBottom-up SynthesisBottom‐up RealisationChemistryGuanine BaseWell‐defined NanoarchitecturesNanoscale ChemistryNanostructure SynthesisHybrid MaterialsNew WayMaterials ScienceInorganic ChemistryNanotechnologyMolecular MaterialTailored Physical PropertiesSupramolecular ChemistryPotential ScaffoldOrganic Material ChemistryNanomaterialsMolecule-based MaterialFunctional MaterialsNanoarchitectonics
Over the last two decades, guanosine-related molecules have been of interest in different areas, ranging from structural biology to medicinal chemistry, supramolecular chemistry and nanotechnology. The guanine base is a multiple hydrogen-bonding unit, capable also of binding to cations, and fits very well with contemporary studies in supramolecular chemistry, self-assembly and non-covalent synthesis. This Concepts article, after reviewing on the diversification of self-organised assemblies from guanosine-based low-molecular-weight molecules, will mainly focus on the use of guanine moiety as a potential scaffold for designing functional materials of tailored physical properties.
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