AVS 63rd International Symposium & Exhibition
    Biomaterials Plenary Session Sunday Sessions
       Session BP-SuA

Invited Paper BP-SuA1
Common Principles in Synthetic Mechanophores and Mechanoresponsive Biomolecules

Sunday, November 6, 2016, 3:00 pm, Room 101A

Session: Biomaterials Plenary
Presenter: Kerstin Blank, Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces, Germany
Correspondent: Click to Email

Much effort is currently invested in the development of (bio)materials with well-defined mechanical properties. This is motivated by the desire to measure cell generated forces in situ at the molecular level and to direct cellular behaviour using controlled mechanical stimuli. In parallel, materials scientists aim at the development of self-reporting and self-healing materials that respond to mechanical force in a predefined way. Key to all these efforts are mechanosensitive molecular building blocks, such as synthetic small molecule mechanophores and mechanoresponsive biomolecules.

Focussing on common principles that guide the design of mechanosensitive molecules, I will introduce our current set of synthetic and biological mechanical building blocks. Following a mechanical calibration at the single molecule level, these building blocks are equipped with a fluorescent reporter system that reports on the mechanical state of the molecule. This allows us to directly correlate the force acting on an individual molecule with a fluorescence readout so that a molecular force sensor is obtained. Considering the above applications, such sensors report on mechanical material deformation in a highly sensitive manner down to the single molecule level. Our approach further opens up new routes towards correlating the bulk and molecular mechanical properties of a material.