Present-forward development
Here counting to "future-forward development" will be everything that is already investigatable by experimental means that are accessible today (more or less widely/costly).
There are basically two fields that need pushing:
- Improving on various foldamer technologies (self-assembling and self-folding)
- Prototyping of very early forms of force applying mechanosynthesis
And looking maybe a bit into the future:
- Manipulating (and assembling!) self-assembled foldamers bricks with scanning probe tips
- Integrating the learned mechanosynthetic capabilities into the learned foldamer capabilities (likely in solvent first)
Contents
Foldamer Technology
Needed is:
- Development of new and
- improvement on existing foldamers technologies
With a particular focus on:
- stiffness
- modular reusability
- separation of concerns
- eventual integration of mechanosynthetic aspects (more or less direct)
To give concrete targets:
(1) Getting to prismatic or otherwise larger scale highly geometric construction bricks that can be be connected in a programmable fashion by self assembly. Or later eventually by guided self assembly or even .... process.
(2) Eventual integration of mechanosynthetic tips for the other development path.
There are foldamer technologies with different degrees of stiffness.
- Low stiffness (most scaleable it seems)
- mid stiffness
- high stiffness (least scaleable is seems)
It may be possible to combine these (insetting the stiffer in the less stiff ones) and the fastest progress combining the best of all worlds. Or one of the stiffer technologies unexpectedly starts scaling better.
Low stiffness foldamer technologies
Of main interest here may be the Structural DNA nanotechnologies (SDN).
Especially the DNA-brick kind of SDN. That is: Cuboid blocks from many short DNA oligimer staples.
Main limitations are:
- not stiff enough for atomically precise placement of anything (with an asterisk).
- programmable attachment points are spaced apart quite far.
- there are pretty big error rates (there is no cell machinery that is helping selfassembly along)
- rapidly dropping yields when going to bigger structure sizes.
Main strengths: It is the foldamer tech …
- … with the largest number of shape-addressable individual sites in an assembly
- … with the most control beyond infinite translatory or rotatory symmetries
The asterisk:
Atomically precise placement via SDN actually has been demonstrated. But only in a time averaged way. Isn't that completely useless? Actually not. As known from statistics one can switch out a temporal average for an spacial average. But how can that be done in an engineering setting?
By integration of a smaller piece of stiffer foldamers (like de-novo proteins) foldamers into a larger piece of the SDN structure (less stiff foldamers) one can average out spacially over all interface attachment points.
That is easier said than done tough. In fact this is probably extremely difficult and necessitates great advances on both involved foldamer technologies. The surrounding and the inserted one. To have sufficient spacial averaging over thermal vibrations the interface surface needs to be large and stiff enough.
Why not just use the stiffer foldamer technology (e.g. de-novo proteins) to begin with? Because it may be (and looks like so) that the stiffer foldamer technologies are more difficult to scale to a necessary size, that it is to couple it so a less stiff but more scalable different foldamer technology.
So in summary:
SDN may be usable as low stiffness very large scale backbone structure for higher stiffness large insets that then do the actual small scale atomically precise holding.
(wiki-TODO: add a sketch of that idea here)
Mid stiffness foldamer technologies
Of main interest here may be de-novo protein engineering.
In particular packed alpha helix bundles and beta sheets are of special interest because of:
- their higher stiffness
- their higher geometry
- their higher folding predictability
High stiffness foldamer technologies
One promising candidate here may be Spiroligomers.
These have their individual monomers (base building blocks) linked together by not just one but by two inter-atomic bonds. This prevents free rotation around single sigma-bonds. Thus:
- the structures are likely notably stiffer than proteins.
- there is no folding foldamer folding involved (actually these are not exactly foldamers anymore)
The shape is pretty much uniquely given by sequence of monomers that where linked together.
Limits to increased stiffness:
- intentional bi-stable snap flips or such may be possible to include on purpose.
- long chains might bend a lot to the point of self-entanglement
- side-stacking issues
Side-stacking: Since there is no folding present to archive volumetric structures it is necessary to stack these spiroligomers sidewards/sideways by some different post processing method. Final structure stiffness may largely depend on how tight one can stack them sideways. The higher stiffness along the chain might even be counterproductive here. That is reduce the sidewards stiffness.
(Note that this is somewhat speculative. The author has never worked with Spiroligomers.)
Fat fingers
Here's a motivational/economic problem:
There are two factors that space out the thermal motion overpowering holding sites stongly:
- separation of concerns by geometric brick modularization
- the afore described approach of stiffer-foldamer in less-stiff foldamer insets
This spacing …
- … is not exactly a problem for far term applications. See fat finger problem.
- … is a problem for near term applications - elaboration follows
spacing caused by pushing for modularization
Take a typical proteins(enzymes) active site (the pocket where molecules get bound and manipulated). When one switches out just one single side-chain "finger" with an other one that has a slightly different shape, then everything else may change with it. Change the shape of one finger slightly and this shape-change propagates to many other (more or less adjacent) ones in highly unpredictable ways.
Through tight packing of the side-chains all the (alone floppy) fingers provide all the other ones mutual support against too big thermal vibrations and against fatal displacements through free rotations.
Changing the structure of "fingers" enough
(e.g. by switching them out through stiff artificial interlinked side-chains packs or spiroligomer packs),
such that they can keep their position sufficiently precisely without the need for "mutual support sideward packing" makes them so big/fat that only very few fingers can reach in on specific point on a target molecule.
Certainly not enough to pick out a molecule based on shape.
This is a problem for near term applications.
This would be a-ok for advanced mechanosynthesis where …
- … molecules to synthesize start out and stay in machine-phase - nothing big and complex needs to be catched from solvent
- … chain polymers can eventually be syntesized by holding them in a "two point stretched out" fashion
- … there is a focus on just a few base simple materials for metamaterials -- and moreover these are crystalline
- …
Effects of very big spacing through foldamer in foldamer insets (pushing for stiffness)
Really far apart spacing like in the case of the proposed foldamer in foldamer insert also comes with another effect. Whatever these stiff-fingers/tips do they do it slower because there are fewer of them around per fixed volume.
This eventually can be compensated through added active motion and applied mechanical forces like:
- higher reaction success rate nearing one -- instead of like e.g. 1 in 1000 reacts on any given attempt
- increased reaction speeds during the reaction -- if this is was a limiting factor
- increased reloading speed -- this may be limited as long as operations are conducted in a solvent rather than a vacuum
See Mechanochemistry
Loss of combinatorial power while gains are not yet harvest-able
The capability of easily trying a huge number of random mutations is a powerful tool for many of today's medical applications. Like e.g. detection of small molecules.
Fighting against conflation of concerns and for modularization for the sake of getting to more advanced forms of APM ASAP requires stiffening the sidechains/fingers/tips. This in turn requires spreading out the fingers. The fingers that are now spaced apart much more become unable to collaborate in huge number on the same local section of a small molecule. So the power for near term application in this regard is lost.
Experimentally accessible very early forms of force applying mechanosynthesis
This has been done on silicon. (wiki-TODO: add details here)