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Paramagnetic encoding of molecules.
Kretschmer, Jan; David, Tomás; Dracínský, Martin; Socha, Ondrej; Jirak, Daniel; Vít, Martin; Jurok, Radek; Kuchar, Martin; Císarová, Ivana; Polasek, Miloslav.
Affiliation
  • Kretschmer J; Institute of Organic Chemistry and Biochemistry of the CAS, Flemingovo námestí 542/2, 160 00, Prague 6, Czech Republic.
  • David T; Department of Organic Chemistry, Faculty of Science, Charles University in Prague, Hlavova 2030/8, 128 43, Prague 2, Czech Republic.
  • Dracínský M; Institute of Organic Chemistry and Biochemistry of the CAS, Flemingovo námestí 542/2, 160 00, Prague 6, Czech Republic.
  • Socha O; Institute of Organic Chemistry and Biochemistry of the CAS, Flemingovo námestí 542/2, 160 00, Prague 6, Czech Republic.
  • Jirak D; Institute of Organic Chemistry and Biochemistry of the CAS, Flemingovo námestí 542/2, 160 00, Prague 6, Czech Republic.
  • Vít M; MR Unit, Department of Radiodiagnostic and Interventional Radiology, Institute for Clinical and Experimental Medicine, Vídenská 1958/9, 140 21, Prague 4, Czech Republic.
  • Jurok R; Institute of Biophysics and Informatics, First Faculty of Medicine, Charles University in Prague, Salmovská 1, 120 00, Prague 2, Czech Republic.
  • Kuchar M; MR Unit, Department of Radiodiagnostic and Interventional Radiology, Institute for Clinical and Experimental Medicine, Vídenská 1958/9, 140 21, Prague 4, Czech Republic.
  • Císarová I; Faculty of Mechatronics Informatics and Interdisciplinary studies, Technical University of Liberec, Hálkova 917/6, 460 01, Liberec, Czech Republic.
  • Polasek M; Forensic Laboratory of Biologically Active Substances, Department of Chemistry of Natural Compounds, University of Chemistry and Technology Prague, Technická 5, 166 28, Prague 6, Czech Republic.
Nat Commun ; 13(1): 3179, 2022 06 08.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35676253
ABSTRACT
Contactless digital tags are increasingly penetrating into many areas of human activities. Digitalization of our environment requires an ever growing number of objects to be identified and tracked with machine-readable labels. Molecules offer immense potential to serve for this purpose, but our ability to write, read, and communicate molecular code with current technology remains limited. Here we show that magnetic patterns can be synthetically encoded into stable molecular scaffolds with paramagnetic lanthanide ions to write digital code into molecules and their mixtures. Owing to the directional character of magnetic susceptibility tensors, each sequence of lanthanides built into one molecule produces a unique magnetic outcome. Multiplexing of the encoded molecules provides a high number of codes that grows double-exponentially with the number of available paramagnetic ions. The codes are readable by nuclear magnetic resonance in the radiofrequency (RF) spectrum, analogously to the macroscopic technology of RF identification. A prototype molecular system capable of 16-bit (65,535 codes) encoding is presented. Future optimized systems can conceivably provide 64-bit (~10^19 codes) or higher encoding to cover the labelling needs in drug discovery, anti-counterfeiting and other areas.
Subject(s)

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Lanthanoid Series Elements Limits: Humans Language: En Journal: Nat Commun Journal subject: BIOLOGIA / CIENCIA Year: 2022 Document type: Article Affiliation country: Czech Republic

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Lanthanoid Series Elements Limits: Humans Language: En Journal: Nat Commun Journal subject: BIOLOGIA / CIENCIA Year: 2022 Document type: Article Affiliation country: Czech Republic
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