Cyclodextrin Glycosides as Materials for Removal of Pathogenic Materials from the Human Environment

Short Communication

Robert Engel and William Bl

Abstract

Cyclodextrins provide an intriguing agent system for the removal of a host of materials from aqueous media in order to prevent pathogens from affecting humans. In the current effort cyclodextrins have been chemically modified such that they may be used efficaciously for the removal of a wide range of harmful materials from aqueous environments impinging on human activities. Among these modifications are those that involve selective targeting of the upper and lower rims of the cyclodextrin species for selective encapsulation of organic chemical toxins of appropriate size, shape, and hydrophobicity, as well as the generation of hyperbranched polymers from the cyclodextrins for enhanced encapsulation, and the functionalization of cyclodextrins for the facilitated destruction of pathogenic bacterial agents. Utility of the constructed cyclodextrin materials for a variety of situations is considered.

Relevant Publications in Journal of Glycobiology