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  1. A binary mixture of mesoporous silica nanoparticles plus organic polyammonium additive (dye or drug) is cleanly converted upon mild heating into hollow nanoparticles. The remodeled nanoparticle shell is an organized nanoscale assembly of globular additive/silica subunits and cancer cell assays show that a loaded drug additive is bioavailable. 
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  2. Co-crystal engineering is a promising method to create new classes of advanced materials. Co-crystal structure prediction is more challenging when one or more of the lattice constituents (tectons) are flexible molecules. This study reports four co-crystals that were prepared by mixing HAuCl 4 or HAuBr 4 with C 3 -symmetric tectons based on a 1,3,5-(methylacetamide)benzene scaffold. X-ray analysis of the co-crystals revealed the presence of three dominant supramolecular interactions; (a) hydrogen bonding between tecton amide NH residues and the AuX 4 − anion, (b) electrostatic stacking of the Au center against the tecton's π-electrons, (c) very short hydrogen bonds within a proton-bridged-carbonyls motif. Within all four co-crystals, the sterically-geared tecton was trapped in a high energy molecular conformation, which increased the number of favorable intermolecular interactions in the lattice. We infer from the results that the likelihood of high energy molecular conformations within a co-crystal increases if there are multiple dominant intermolecular interactions. Application of this generalizable rule should lead to improved crystal structure prediction. 
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  4. A supramolecular dye-capture system comprising anionic amidosquaraine guest and macrocyclic tetralactam host exhibits nanomolar affinity and “turn on” visible fluorescence. Utility is demonstrated with a new fluorescent assay for liposome leakage induced by the biomedically important enzyme phospholipase A 2 . 
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  5. null (Ed.)
    Macrocyclic hosts have long been used for guest encapsulation, and recently a new application has emerged; employment as supramolecular elements for capture and recovery of gold through host/guest co-precipitation. The guests are square-planar tetrahaloaurate anions, practically important gold complexes with a capacity to engage in non-covalent interactions such as hydrogen bonding and Au–π interactions. The successful macrocyclic hosts for co-precipitation include cyclodextrins, cucurbiturils, and cyclophanes, with recent expansion of the structural scope to include acyclic amides. 
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  6. Abstract

    Strong‐binding host–guest pairings in aqueous media have potential as “supramolecular glues” in biomedical techniques, complementing the widely‐used (strept)avidin‐biotin combination. We have previously found that squaraine dyes are bound very strongly by tetralactam macrocycles possessing anthracenyl units as cavity walls. Here we show that replacing the anthracenes with pentacyclic 5,7,12,14‐tetrahydro‐5,7,12,14‐tetraoxapentacene (TOP) units generates receptors which bind squaraines with increased affinities (aroundKa=1010m−1) and improved selectivities. Binding can be followed through changes to squaraine fluorescence and absorbance. The TOP units are easy to prepare and potentially variable, while the TOP‐based receptor shows improved photostability, both in itself and in complex with squaraines. The results suggest that this system could prove valuable in the further development of practical “synthavidin” chemistry.

     
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