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Dive into the research topics where One Sun Lee is active.

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Featured researches published by One Sun Lee.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Atomistic molecular dynamics simulations of peptide amphiphile self-assembly into cylindrical nanofibers

One Sun Lee; Samuel I. Stupp; George C. Schatz

Relaxation of a self-assembled structure of 144 peptide amphiphile (PA) molecules into cylindrical nanofibers is studied using atomistic molecular dynamics simulations including explicit water with physiological ion concentration. The PA for these studies includes a hydrophobic alkyl chain that is attached to the N-terminus of the sequence SLSLAAAEIKVAV. The self-assembly is initiated with PA molecules in a roughly cylindrical configuration, as suggested from previous experimental and theoretical investigations, and the cylindrical configuration that results is found to be stable during 40 ns simulations. In the converged structure of the resulting nanofiber, the cylinder radius is ∼44 Å, a result that is consistent with experimental results. Water and sodium ions can penetrate into the peptide portion of the fiber but not between the alkyl chains. Even though each PA has an identical sequence, a broad distribution of secondary structure is found in the converged structure of the nanofiber. The β-sheet population for the SLSL and IKV segments of the peptide is ∼25%, which is consistent with previous circular dichroism results. We also found that the epitope sequence IKVAV is located on the surface of the nanofiber, as designed for the promotion of the neurite growth. Our findings will be useful for designing new PA fibers that have improved bioactive properties.


Nature Communications | 2014

Cell death versus cell survival instructed by supramolecular cohesion of nanostructures

Christina J. Newcomb; Shantanu Sur; Julia H. Ortony; One Sun Lee; John B. Matson; Job Boekhoven; Jeong Min Yu; George C. Schatz; Samuel I. Stupp

Many naturally occurring peptides containing cationic and hydrophobic domains have evolved to interact with mammalian cell membranes and have been incorporated into materials for non-viral gene delivery, cancer therapy, or treatment of microbial infections. Their electrostatic attraction to the negatively charged cell surface and hydrophobic interactions with the membrane lipids enable intracellular delivery or cell lysis. While the effects of hydrophobicity and cationic charge of soluble molecules on the cell membrane are well known, the interactions between materials with these molecular features and cells remain poorly understood. Here we report that varying the cohesive forces within nanofibres of supramolecular materials with nearly identical cationic and hydrophobic structure instruct cell death or cell survival. Weak intermolecular bonds promote cell death through disruption of lipid membranes, while materials reinforced by hydrogen bonds support cell viability. These findings provide new strategies to design biomaterials that interact with the cell membrane.


Nano Letters | 2012

Modeling the Self-Assembly of Peptide Amphiphiles into Fibers Using Coarse-Grained Molecular Dynamics

One Sun Lee; Vince Y. Cho; George C. Schatz

We have studied the self-assembly of peptide amphiphiles (PAs) into a cylindrical micelle fiber starting from a homogeneous mixture of PAs in water using coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations. Nine independent 16 μs runs all show spontaneous fiber formation in which the PA molecules first form spherical micelles, and then micelles form a three-dimensional network via van der Waals interactions. As the hydrophobic core belonging to the different micelles merge, the three-dimensional network disappears and a fiber having a diameter of ∼80 Å appears. In agreement with atomistic simulation results, water molecules are excluded from the hydrophobic core and penetrate to ∼15 Å away from the axis of fiber. About 66% of the surface of fiber is covered with the IKVAV epitope, and ∼92% of the epitope is exposed to water molecules.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2013

Steered molecular dynamics studies of the potential of mean force for peptide amphiphile self-assembly into cylindrical nanofibers.

Tao Yu; One Sun Lee; George C. Schatz

Steered molecular dynamics (SMD) simulations were applied to determine the potential of mean force for the self-assembly of peptide amphiphile (PA) nanofibers, specifically considering a single PA adding to a growing cylindrical nanofiber at 310 K. It is found that the free energy, enthalpy, and entropy differences for this assembly process are -67 kcal/mol, -71.5 kcal/ml, and -14.5 cal/(mol K), respectively, and therefore that enthalpy provides the driving force for self-assembly to form a fiber. A pairwise interaction analysis shows that both electrostatic and van der Waals interactions play important roles in the self-assembly process, with the van der Waals interaction being the larger effect. The mechanistic picture that emerges from this work is that as the PA is pulled from the fiber, the interaction evolves through three stages: (1) initially electrostatic interactions between the charged head of the pulled PA and other PAs, and between the pulled PA and solvent are dominant, (2) after the charged head emerges, the rest of the peptide comes out, with both PA-solvent electrostatic interactions and van der Waals interactions being significant, and (3) in the last step, the alkane tail emerges, dominated by van der Waals interactions with either peptide or solvent.


ACS Nano | 2011

Triggered release of pharmacophores from [Ni(HAsO3)]-loaded polymer-caged nanobin enhances pro-apoptotic activity: A combined experimental and theoretical study

Sang Min Lee; One Sun Lee; Thomas V. O'Halloran; George C. Schatz; SonBinh T. Nguyen

Nanoscale drug delivery platforms can provide an attractive therapeutic strategy for cancer treatments, as they can substantially reduce the adverse side effects associated with toxic small-molecule anticancer agents. For enhanced therapeutic efficacy to be achieved with such platforms, a tumor-specific drug-release trigger is a critical requirement. This article reports the use of a pH-sensitive polymer network that surrounds a nanoscale liposome core to trigger the release of both encapsulated hydrophilic, membrane-impermeable Ni(II) cations and amphipathic, membrane-permeable As(III) anticancer agents under acidic conditions commonly encountered in hypoxic tumor tissues and late endosomes. Computational modeling studies provide clear evidence that the acid-triggered drug-release mechanism for this polymer-caged nanobin (PCN) platform arises from a pH- and temperature-responsive conformation change of the cross-linked polymer cage. As a result, the simultaneous release of both of the active agents in this multicomponent therapeutic enhances the pro-apoptotic activity of As(III) while diminishing its acute toxicity, potentially reducing the undesirable side effects commonly associated with this free drug. The ability to engender acid-triggered release of drugs co-encapsulated inside a liposomal template makes drug delivery using PCN an attractive strategy for triggered drug release.


Nano Letters | 2010

Arrays of Nanoscale Lenses for Subwavelength Optical Lithography

Jae Won Jang; Zijian Zheng; One Sun Lee; Wooyoung Shim; Gengfeng Zheng; George C. Schatz; Chad A. Mirkin

Poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) polymer lens arrays are made by using dip-pen nanolithography to deposit nanoscale PEG features on hydrophobically modified quartz glass. The dimensions of the PEG lenses are controlled by tuning dwell time and polymer molecular weight. The PEG polymer lenses on the quartz substrate act as a phase-shift photomask for fabricating subwavelength scale features, ∼ 100 nm in width. Depending upon UV irradiation time during the photolithography, the photoresist nanostructures can be transitioned from well-shaped (short time) to ring-shaped (long time) features. The technique can be used to pattern large areas through the use of cantilever arrays.


Chemical Communications | 2009

Inversion of product selectivity in an enzyme-inspired metallosupramolecular tweezer catalyzed epoxidation reaction

Pirmin A. Ulmann; Adam B. Braunschweig; One Sun Lee; Michael J. Wiester; George C. Schatz; Chad A. Mirkin

This study describes a heteroligated, hemilabile Pt(II)-P,S tweezer coordination complex that combines a chiral Jacobsen-Katsuki Mn(III)-salen epoxidation catalyst with an amidopyridine receptor, which leads to an inversion of the major epoxide product compared to catalysts without a recognition group.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2012

A- to B-form transition in DNA between gold surfaces.

One Sun Lee; Vince Y. Cho; George C. Schatz

Molecular dynamics simulations have been performed to characterize the conformation of DNA that is present when DNA links gold nanoparticles to form nanoparticle superlattice crystals. To model the DNA-linked gold nanoparticles, four strands of DNA are used to connect two gold surfaces, with a small interstrand separation and high added salt to match experiment. A-form DNA was assumed for the initial conformation, as this form of DNA has a length per base-pair that matches lengths that have been inferred from X-ray measurements. The DNA structure was monitored for 40 ns, and the distributions of the slide and z(p) coordinates were obtained from the simulations. We find that all the double-stranded DNA (ds-DNA) strands transform from A- to B-DNA during the simulations. In addition, single-stranded DNAa (ss-DNAs) that are used to connect the ds-DNA to each surface are found to become adsorbed on the gold surfaces during this process, and the ds-DNAs bend (∼143°) at their junctions with the two gold surfaces to accommodate the observed distance between gold surfaces using B-form DNA. We infer from this that the short length of DNA between the gold surfaces is not due to the presence of A-DNA.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2011

Computational simulations of the interaction of lipid membranes with DNA-functionalized gold nanoparticles.

One Sun Lee; George C. Schatz

We develop a shape-based coarse-grained (SBCG) model for DNA-functionalized gold nanoparticles (DNA-Au NPs) and use this to study the interaction of this potential antisense therapeutic with a lipid bilayer model of a cell membrane that is also represented using a coarse-grained model. Molecular dynamics simulations of the SBCG model of the DNA-Au NP show structural properties which coincide with our previous atomistic models of this system. The lipid membrane is composed of 30% negatively charged lipid (1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoserine, DOPS) and 70% neutral lipid (1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine, DOPC) in 0.15 M sodium chloride solution. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of the DNA-Au NP near to the lipid bilayer show that there is a higher density of DOPS than DOPC near to the DNA-Au NP since sodium counterions are able to have strong electrostatic interactions with DOPS and the DNA-Au NP at the same time. Using a steered MD simulation, we show that this counterion-mediated electrostatic interaction between DNA-Au NP and DOPS stabilizes the DNA-Au NP in direct contact with the lipid. This provides a model for interaction of DNA-Au NPs with cell membranes that does not require protein mediation.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2014

Molecular Dynamics Simulations and Electronic Excited State Properties of a Self-Assembled Peptide Amphiphile Nanofiber with Metalloporphyrin Arrays

Tao Yu; One Sun Lee; George C. Schatz

We have employed molecular dynamics simulations and quantum chemistry methods to study the structures and electronic absorption properties of a novel type of photonic nanowire gel constructed by the self-assembly of peptide amphiphiles (PAs) and the chromophore-(PPIX)Zn molecules. Using molecular dynamics simulations, structures of the self-assembled fiber were determined with atomistic detail, including the distribution of chromophores along the nanofiber and the relative distances and orientations of pairs of chromophores. In addition, quantum chemistry calculations were used to determine the electronic structure and absorption properties of the chromophores in the fiber, so as to assess the capabilities of the nanofiber for photonics applications. The calculations show that the PA nanofiber provides an effective scaffold for the chromophores in which the chromophores form several clusters in which nearest neighbor chromophores are separated by less than 20 Å. The calculations also indicate that the chromophores can be in both the hydrophilic shell and hydrophobic core portions of the fiber. There are only small spectral shifts to the B-band of the porphyrins arising from the inhomogeneous microelectronic environment provided by the fiber. However, there are much stronger electronic interactions between nearby pairs of chromophores, leading to a more significant red shift of the B-band that is similar to what is found in the experiments and to significant excitonic coupling that is seen in circular dichroism spectra. This electronic interaction between chromophores associated with the PA nanofiber structure is crucial to future applications of these fibers for light-harvesting applications.

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Doo Soo Chung

Seoul National University

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Sungu Hwang

Seoul National University

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Tao Yu

Northwestern University

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Vince Y. Cho

Northwestern University

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Hasuck Kim

Seoul National University

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Taek Dong Chung

Seoul National University

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