TY - JOUR
T1 - Guanine Crystallization by Particle Attachment
AU - Indri, Shashanka S.
AU - Dietrich, Florian M.
AU - Wagner, Avital
AU - Hartstein, Michal
AU - Nativ-Roth, Einat
AU - Pavan, Mariela J.
AU - Kronik, Leeor
AU - Salvalaglio, Matteo
AU - Palmer, Benjamin A.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society.
PY - 2025/6/4
Y1 - 2025/6/4
N2 - Understanding how crystals nucleate is a key goal in materials, biomineralization, and chemistry. Many inorganic materials are known to crystallize “nonclassically” by particle attachment. However, a molecular-level understanding of small molecule crystallization is hampered by the complexity and time scales of nucleation events, which are often too large to simulate and too small to observe. Here, by combining unbiased molecular dynamics simulations and in situ experiments, we uncover this nucleation “blind spot” to elucidate the nonclassical crystallization mechanism of the nucleobase, guanine. The multi-step nucleation process begins with stacked guanine clusters, whose H-bonding and π-stacking arrangement progressively orders as they attach into nanoscopic fibers (observed by simulation and electron microscopy), partially ordered bundles, and finally, 3D periodic crystals. This work provides a foundation for understanding how organisms exquisitely control the formation of guanine and other molecular crystals, which are used ubiquitously in biology as optical and nitrogen-storage materials.
AB - Understanding how crystals nucleate is a key goal in materials, biomineralization, and chemistry. Many inorganic materials are known to crystallize “nonclassically” by particle attachment. However, a molecular-level understanding of small molecule crystallization is hampered by the complexity and time scales of nucleation events, which are often too large to simulate and too small to observe. Here, by combining unbiased molecular dynamics simulations and in situ experiments, we uncover this nucleation “blind spot” to elucidate the nonclassical crystallization mechanism of the nucleobase, guanine. The multi-step nucleation process begins with stacked guanine clusters, whose H-bonding and π-stacking arrangement progressively orders as they attach into nanoscopic fibers (observed by simulation and electron microscopy), partially ordered bundles, and finally, 3D periodic crystals. This work provides a foundation for understanding how organisms exquisitely control the formation of guanine and other molecular crystals, which are used ubiquitously in biology as optical and nitrogen-storage materials.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105006623822&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/jacs.5c04543
DO - 10.1021/jacs.5c04543
M3 - Article
C2 - 40407389
AN - SCOPUS:105006623822
SN - 0002-7863
VL - 147
SP - 19139
EP - 19147
JO - Journal of the American Chemical Society
JF - Journal of the American Chemical Society
IS - 22
ER -