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Dive into the research topics where Wouter E. Hendriksen is active.

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Featured researches published by Wouter E. Hendriksen.


Science | 2015

Transient assembly of active materials fueled by a chemical reaction

Job Boekhoven; Wouter E. Hendriksen; Ger J. M. Koper; Rienk Eelkema; Jan H. van Esch

Nonequilibrium transient self-assembly In biology, the constant supply of energy can drive a system to be far from its equilibrium conditions and allow for useful work to be done. In contrast, in most synthetic systems, there is a drive toward lower energy states. Boekhoven et al. made a molecule that can switch between a nonassociating state and an associating state through the addition of a chemical fuel (see the Perspective by Van der Zwagg and Meijer). The lifetime, stiffness, and regenerative behavior of the self-assembled state could be controlled and tuned by the kinetics of fuel conversion. Science, this issue p. 1075; see also p. 1056 A synthetic chemical system exhibits transient self-assembly fueled by a chemical reaction. [Also see Perspective by Van der Zwagg and Meijer] Fuel-driven self-assembly of actin filaments and microtubules is a key component of cellular organization. Continuous energy supply maintains these transient biomolecular assemblies far from thermodynamic equilibrium, unlike typical synthetic systems that spontaneously assemble at thermodynamic equilibrium. Here, we report the transient self-assembly of synthetic molecules into active materials, driven by the consumption of a chemical fuel. In these materials, reaction rates and fuel levels, instead of equilibrium composition, determine properties such as lifetime, stiffness, and self-regeneration capability. Fibers exhibit strongly nonlinear behavior including stochastic collapse and simultaneous growth and shrinkage, reminiscent of microtubule dynamics.


Angewandte Chemie | 2015

Spatial Structuring of a Supramolecular Hydrogel by using a Visible‐Light Triggered Catalyst

Chandan Maity; Wouter E. Hendriksen; Jan H. van Esch; Rienk Eelkema

Spatial control over the self-assembly of synthetic molecular fibers through the use of light-switchable catalysts can lead to the controlled formation of micropatterns made up of hydrogel structures. A photochromic switch, capable of reversibly releasing a proton upon irradiation, can act as a catalyst for in situ chemical bond formation between otherwise soluble building blocks, thereby leading to fiber formation and gelation in water. The use of a photoswitchable catalyst allows control over the distribution as well as the mechanical properties of the hydrogel material. By using homemade photomasks, spatially structured hydrogels were formed starting from bulk solutions of small molecule gelator precursors through light-triggered local catalyst activation.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Gelation Landscape Engineering Using a Multi-Reaction Supramolecular Hydrogelator System

Jamie S. Foster; Justyna M. Żurek; Nuno Miguel da Silva Almeida; Wouter E. Hendriksen; Vincent A. A. le Sage; Vasudevan Lakshminarayanan; Amber L. Thompson; Rahul Banerjee; Rienk Eelkema; Helen Mulvana; Martin J. Paterson; Jan H. van Esch; Gareth O. Lloyd

Simultaneous control of the kinetics and thermodynamics of two different types of covalent chemistry allows pathway selectivity in the formation of hydrogelating molecules from a complex reaction network. This can lead to a range of hydrogel materials with vastly different properties, starting from a set of simple starting compounds and reaction conditions. Chemical reaction between a trialdehyde and the tuberculosis drug isoniazid can form one, two, or three hydrazone connectivity products, meaning kinetic gelation pathways can be addressed. Simultaneously, thermodynamics control the formation of either a keto or an enol tautomer of the products, again resulting in vastly different materials. Overall, this shows that careful navigation of a reaction landscape using both kinetic and thermodynamic selectivity can be used to control material selection from a complex reaction network.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2015

Supramolecular Protein Immobilization on Lipid Bilayers

Ralph P. G. Bosmans; Wouter E. Hendriksen; Mark Lloyd Verheijden; Rienk Eelkema; Pascal Jonkheijm; J.H. van Esch; Luc Brunsveld

Protein immobilization on surfaces, and on lipid bilayers specifically, has great potential in biomolecular and biotechnological research. Of current special interest is the immobilization of proteins using supramolecular noncovalent interactions. This allows for a reversible immobilization and obviates the use of harsh ligation conditions that could denature fragile proteins. In the work presented here, reversible supramolecular immobilization of proteins on lipid bilayer surfaces was achieved by using the host-guest interaction of the macrocyclic molecule cucurbit[8]uril. A fluorescent protein was successfully immobilized on the lipid bilayer by making use of the property of cucurbit[8]uril to host together a methylviologen and the indole of a tryptophan positioned on the N-terminal of the protein. The supramolecular complex was anchored to the bilayer through a cholesterol moiety that was attached to the methylviologen tethered with a small polyethylene glycol spacer. Protein immobilization studies using a quartz crystal microbalance (QCM) showed the assembly of the supramolecular complexes on the bilayer. Specific immobilization through the protein N-terminus is more efficient than through protein side-chain events. Reversible surface release of the proteins could be achieved by washing with cucurbit[8]uril or buffer alone. The described system shows the potential of supramolecular assembly of proteins and provides a method for site-specific protein immobilization under mild conditions in a reversible manner.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Fuel-Mediated Transient Clustering of Colloidal Building Blocks

Bas G. P. van Ravensteijn; Wouter E. Hendriksen; Rienk Eelkema; Jan H. van Esch; Willem K. Kegel

Fuel-driven assembly operates under the continuous influx of energy and results in superstructures that exist out of equilibrium. Such dissipative processes provide a route toward structures and transient behavior unreachable by conventional equilibrium self-assembly. Although perfected in biological systems like microtubules, this class of assembly is only sparsely used in synthetic or colloidal analogues. Here, we present a novel colloidal system that shows transient clustering driven by a chemical fuel. Addition of fuel causes an increase in hydrophobicity of the building blocks by actively removing surface charges, thereby driving their aggregation. Depletion of fuel causes reappearance of the charged moieties and leads to disassembly of the formed clusters. This reassures that the system returns to its initial, equilibrium state. By taking advantage of the cyclic nature of our system, we show that clustering can be induced several times by simple injection of new fuel. The fuel-mediated assembly of colloidal building blocks presented here opens new avenues to the complex landscape of nonequilibrium colloidal structures, guided by biological design principles.


Nature Communications | 2017

Free-standing supramolecular hydrogel objects by reaction-diffusion

Matija Lovrak; Wouter E. Hendriksen; Chandan Maity; Serhii Mytnyk; Volkert van Steijn; Rienk Eelkema; Jan H. van Esch

Self-assembly provides access to a variety of molecular materials, yet spatial control over structure formation remains difficult to achieve. Here we show how reaction–diffusion (RD) can be coupled to a molecular self-assembly process to generate macroscopic free-standing objects with control over shape, size, and functionality. In RD, two or more reactants diffuse from different positions to give rise to spatially defined structures on reaction. We demonstrate that RD can be used to locally control formation and self-assembly of hydrazone molecular gelators from their non-assembling precursors, leading to soft, free-standing hydrogel objects with sizes ranging from several hundred micrometres up to centimeters. Different chemical functionalities and gradients can easily be integrated in the hydrogel objects by using different reactants. Our methodology, together with the vast range of organic reactions and self-assembling building blocks, provides a general approach towards the programmed fabrication of soft microscale objects with controlled functionality and shape.


Nature Communications | 2017

Erratum: Free-standing supramolecular hydrogel objects by reaction-diffusion

Matija Lovrak; Wouter E. Hendriksen; Chandan Maity; Serhii Mytnyk; Volkert van Steijn; Rienk Eelkema; Jan H. van Esch

This corrects the article DOI: 10.1038/ncomms15317.


Archive | 2015

Chapter 7:Non-equilibrium Molecular Self-assembly

Ger J. M. Koper; Wouter E. Hendriksen

We discuss theoretical frameworks for non-equilibrium self-assembly and illustrate these for the archetypical molecular self-assembly system. It is found that model predictions compare favourably to experimental results on an out-of-equilibrium gelating system. Extensions of the model to more interesting behaviour such as bi-stability due to non-linear and autocatalytic formation kinetics are discussed.


Chemical Communications | 2012

Dynamic covalent assembly of stimuli responsive vesicle gels

Christophe B. Minkenberg; Wouter E. Hendriksen; Feng Li; Eduardo Mendes; Rienk Eelkema; Jan H. van Esch


International Journal of Thermophysics | 2013

The Lost Work in Dissipative Self-Assembly

Ger J. M. Koper; Job Boekhoven; Wouter E. Hendriksen; J.H. van Esch; Rienk Eelkema; Ignacio Pagonabarraga; J. M. Rubi; Dick Bedeaux

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Rienk Eelkema

Delft University of Technology

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Jan H. van Esch

Delft University of Technology

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Ger J. M. Koper

Delft University of Technology

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Chandan Maity

Delft University of Technology

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J.H. van Esch

Delft University of Technology

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Serhii Mytnyk

Delft University of Technology

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Volkert van Steijn

Delft University of Technology

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Job Boekhoven

Technische Universität München

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