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Dive into the research topics where Takako Mashiko is active.

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Featured researches published by Takako Mashiko.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2018

Quantitative Analysis of Self‐Assembly Process of a Pd2L4 Cage Consisting of Rigid Ditopic Ligands

Shumpei Kai; Vicente Martí-Centelles; Yui Sakuma; Takako Mashiko; Tatsuo Kojima; Umpei Nagashima; Masanori Tachikawa; Paul J. Lusby; Shuichi Hiraoka

The self-assembly process of a Pd2 L4 cage complex consisting of rigid ditopic ligands, in which two 3-pyridyl groups are connected to a benzene ring through acetylene bonds and PdII ions was revealed by a recently developed quantitative analysis of self-assembly process (QASAP), with which the self-assembly process of coordination assemblies can be investigated by monitoring the evolution with time of the average composition of all the intermediates. QASAP revealed that the rate-determining steps of the cage formation are the intramolecular ligand exchanges in the final stage of the self-assembly: [Pd2 L4 Py*2 ]4+ →[Pd2 L4 Py*1 ]4+ +Py* and [Pd2 L4 Py*1 ]4+ →[Pd2 L4 ]4+ +Py* (Py*: 3-chloropyridine, which was used as a leaving ligand on the metal source). The energy barriers for the two reactions were determined to be 22.3 and 21.9 kcal mol-1 , respectively. DFT calculations of the transition-state (TS) structures for the two steps indicated that the distortion of the trigonal-bipyramidal PdII center at the TS geometries increases the activation free energy of the two steps.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2017

The Effect of Solvent and Coordination Environment of Metal Source on the Self-Assembly Pathway of a Pd(II)-Mediated Coordination Capsule

Shumpei Kai; Yui Sakuma; Takako Mashiko; Tatsuo Kojima; Masanori Tachikawa; Shuichi Hiraoka

The effect of reaction environment on the self-assembly process of an octahedron-shaped Pd6L8 capsule was investigated. Quantitative analysis of self-assembly process with 1H NMR spectroscopy revealed that the self-assembly pathway of the capsule was altered by solvent and a leaving ligand coordinating to the metal source, which are not the components of the final self-assembly. Solvents definitively determine the pathway of the self-assembly at a very early stage of the self-assembly. Contrary to the expectation that the weaker the coordination ability of the leaving ligand is, the faster the formation of the final assembly becomes, a leaving ligand with weak coordination ability tends to generate a kinetically trapped species to prevent the capsule formation under mild conditions.


Communications Chemistry | 2018

Hyperthermostable cube-shaped assembly in water

Yi-Yang Zhan; Kazuho Ogata; Tatsuo Kojima; Takuya Koide; Kentaro Ishii; Takako Mashiko; Masanori Tachikawa; Susumu Uchiyama; Shuichi Hiraoka

Proteins in hyperthermophiles exhibit extremely high thermal stability unlike general proteins. These thermostable proteins are stabilized by weak molecular interactions such as hydrogen bonding, charge interactions and van der Waals (vdW) interactions, along with the hydrophobic effect. An in-depth understanding of the stabilization mechanisms will enable us to rationally design artificial molecules with very high thermal stability. Here we show thermally stable supramolecular assemblies composed of six identical amphiphilic molecules having an indented hydrophobic surface, held together by weak intermolecular interactions (vdW and cation-π interactions) and the hydrophobic effect in water. The disassembly temperature of one of the assemblies is over 150 °C, which is higher than that of the most hyperthermophilic protein reported to date (PhCutA1). Study of the relationship between the structure of the components and the stability of the assemblies indicates that the hyperthermostability is achieved only if all the weak interactions and the hydrophobic effect work cooperatively.The self-assembly of thermally stable structures in water is a challenge in supramolecular chemistry. Here, cooperativity between weak intramolecular forces allows amphiphiles to associate into cube-shaped assemblies that are thermally stable in water up to 150 °C.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2018

Importance of Molecular Meshing for the Stabilization of Solvophobic Assemblies

Yi-Yang Zhan; Naru Tanaka; Yuka Ozawa; Tatsuo Kojima; Takako Mashiko; Umpei Nagashima; Masanori Tachikawa; Shuichi Hiraoka

The effect of the methyl groups in neutral gear-shaped amphiphiles (GSAs) on the stability of nanocubes was investigated using a novel C2 v-symmetric GSA, which was synthesized using selective alternate trilithiation of a pentabrominated hexaphenylbenzene derivative. The lack of only one methyl group in the GSA decreased the association constant for the assembly of the nanocube by 3 orders of magnitude. A surface analysis recently developed by the authors (SAVPR: surface analysis with varying probe radii) was carried out for characteristic isomers of the nanocube consisting of C2 v-symmetric GSAs. It was found that the methyl groups near the equator of the nanocube play a significant role in the stabilization of the nanocubes.


Molecular Simulation | 2015

Molecular dynamics simulation of self-assembled nanocubes in methanol

Takako Mashiko; Kenta Yamada; Shuichi Hiraoka; Umpei Nagashima; Masanori Tachikawa

Molecular dynamics simulations were performed for the hexameric nanocubes of methylated (16) and demethylated (26) gear-shaped amphiphiles in pure methanol to reveal the difference in structural fluctuation between 16 and 26. Within our simulation time of 2.0 ns, the cubic structure of 16 in methanol is maintained, whereas that of 26 is collapsed. We found that the triple π-stacking moieties consisting of the three 3-pyridyl groups in 26 are more fluctuated than those in 16. This suggests that methyl groups serve to reduce structural fluctuation for nanocubes. We also found that the existence of the solvent molecules near the nanocube is an important factor for the collapse of the 26 structure.


Chemistry Letters | 2014

Molecular Dynamics and Principal Component Analysis for a Self-assembled Nanocube in Aqueous Solution

Takako Mashiko; Kenta Yamada; Tatsuo Kojima; Shuichi Hiraoka; Umpei Nagashima; Masanori Tachikawa


Chemical Communications | 2018

Semi-quantitative evaluation of molecular meshing via surface analysis with varying probe radii

Naru Tanaka; Yi-Yang Zhan; Yuka Ozawa; Tatsuo Kojima; Takuya Koide; Takako Mashiko; Umpei Nagashima; Masanori Tachikawa; Shuichi Hiraoka


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2017

Theoretical study on substituent and solvent effects for nanocubes formed with gear-shaped amphiphile molecules.

Takako Mashiko; Shuichi Hiraoka; Umpei Nagashima; Masanori Tachikawa


International Journal of Quantum Chemistry | 2013

Theoretical analysis of correlation between ionization threshold fluence in IR‐MALDI and IR absorption spectrum of matrix molecules

Makoto Hatakeyama; Takako Mashiko; Hisanao Hazama; Kunio Awazu; Masanori Tachikawa


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2018

Programed dynamical ordering in self-organization processes of a nanocube: a molecular dynamics study

Ryuhei Harada; Takako Mashiko; Masanori Tachikawa; Shuichi Hiraoka; Yasuteru Shigeta

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Umpei Nagashima

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

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Kenta Yamada

Yokohama City University

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Takuya Koide

Yokohama City University

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Yui Sakuma

Yokohama City University

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