| 
 
   
            
             
				Twisting molecules by brute force - 
            
				
				12-14-2011, 11:10 AM
			
		  
	
                
            	
		
		
CLEVELAND – Molecules that are twisted are ubiquitous in nature, and  have important consequences in biology, chemistry, physics and  medicine.  Some molecules have unique and technologically useful optical  properties; the medicinal properties of drugs depend on the direction  of the twist; and within us – think of the double helix – twisted DNA  can interact with different proteins.  
 	This twisting is called chirality and researchers at Case Western  Reserve University have found they can use a macroscopic brute force to  impose and induce a twist in an otherwise non-chiral molecule. 
 	Their new "top-down" approach is described in the Dec. 2 issue of Physical Review Letters. 
 	"The key is that we used a macroscopic force to create chirality  down to the molecular level," said Charles Rosenblatt, professor of  physics at Case Western Reserve and the senior author on the paper.  Rosenblatt started the research with no application in mind. He simply  wanted to see if it could be done — essentially scientific acrobatics. 
 	But, he points out, since antiquity chirality has played a role in  health, energy, technology and more — but until now, chirality always  has been a bottom-up phenomenon. This new top-down approach, if it can  be scaled up, could lead to custom designed chirality - and therefore  desired properties - in all kinds of things. 
 	Rosenblatt worked with post-doctoral researcher Rajratan Basu,  graduate student Joel S. Pendery, and professor Rolfe G. Petschek, of  the physics department at Case Western Reserve, and Chemistry Professor  Robert P. Lemieux of Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario.  
 	Chirality isn't as simple as a twist in a material. More precisely, a  chiral object can't be superimposed on its mirror image. In a "thought  experiment", if one's hand can pass through a mirror (like Alice Through  the Looking Glass), the hand cannot be rotated so that it matches its  mirror image. Therefore one's hand is chiral. 
 	Depending on the twist, scientists define chiral objects as  left-handed and right-handed. Objects that can superimpose themselves on  their mirror image, such as a wine goblet, are not chiral. 
 	In optics, chiral molecules rotate the polarization of light – the  direction depends on whether the molecules are left-handed or  right-handed. Liquid crystal computer and television screen  manufacturers take advantage of this property to enable you to clearly  see images from an angle. 
 	In the drug industry, chirality is crucial.  
 Two drugs with the identical chemical formula have different uses.  Dextromethorphan, which is right-handed, is a cough syrup and  levomethorphan, which is lefthanded, is a narcotic painkiller. 
 	The reason for the different effects? The drugs interact differently  with biomolecules inside us, depending on the biomolecules' chirality. 
 	After meeting with Lemieux at a conference, the researchers invented  a method to create chirality in a liquid crystal at the molecular  level. 
 	They treated two glass slides so that cigar-shaped liquid crystal  molecules would align along a particular direction. They then created a  thin cell with the slides, but rotated the  two alignment directions by  approximately a 20 degree angle.   
 	The 20-degree difference caused the molecules' orientation to  undergo a right-handed helical rotation, like a standard screw, from one  side to the other. This is the imposed chiral twist. 
The twist, however, is like a tightened spring and costs energy to  maintain. To reduce this cost, some of the naturally left-handed  molecules in the crystal became right-handed. That's because,  inherently, right-handed molecules give rise to a macroscopic  right-handed twist, Rosenblatt explained. This shift of molecules from  left-handed to right-handed is the induced chirality. 
 	Although the law of entropy suggests there would be nearly identical  numbers of left-handed and right-handed molecules, in order to keep  total energy cost at a minimum, the right-handed molecules outnumbered  the left, he said. 
 	To test for chirality, the researchers applied an electrical field  perpendicular to the molecules. If there were no chirality, there would  be nothing to see. If there were chirality, the helical twist would  rotate in proportion to the amount of right-handed excess.  
 	They observed a modest rotation, which became larger when they increased the twist. 
 	"The effect was occurring everywhere in the cell, but was strongest at the surface," Rosenblatt said. 
 	Scientists have built chirality into optical materials, electrooptic  devices, and more by starting at the molecular level. But the  researchers are not aware of other techniques that use a macroscopic  force to bring chiralty down to molecules.   
 	The researchers are continuing to investigate ways this can be done. 
 
 
link
 
		
		
			 
            
                
            
				Know your drug, know your dose, know your source & know yourself...   
You're only as old as the woman you feel...  
I've spent a lot of money on good drugs, hot chicks and fast cars.  
The rest I just squandered...   
			 
		
		
	
	 |