20 research outputs found
Quantum Chemical Calculation of p<i>K</i><sub>a</sub>s of Environmentally Relevant Functional Groups: Carboxylic Acids, Amines, and Thiols in Aqueous Solution
Developing
accurate quantum chemical approaches for calculating
p<i>K</i><sub>a</sub>s is of broad interest. Useful accuracy
can be obtained by using density functional theory (DFT) in combination
with a polarizable continuum solvent model. However, some classes
of molecules present problems for this approach, yielding errors greater
than 5 p<i>K</i> units. Various methods have been developed
to improve the accuracy of the combined strategy. These methods perform
well but either do not generalize or introduce additional degrees
of freedom, increasing the computational cost. The Solvation Model
based on Density (SMD) has emerged as one of the most commonly used
continuum solvent models. Nevertheless, for some classes of organic
compounds, e.g., thiols, the p<i>K</i><sub>a</sub>s calculated
with the original SMD model show errors of 6ā10 p<i>K</i> units, and we traced these errors to inaccuracies in the solvation
free energies of the anions. To improve the accuracy of p<i>K</i><sub>a</sub>s calculated with DFT and the SMD model, we developed
a scaled solvent-accessible surface approach for constructing the
soluteāsolvent boundary. By using a ādirectā
approach, in which all quantities are computed in the presence of
the continuum solvent, the use of thermodynamic cycles is avoided.
Furthermore, no explicit water molecules are required. Three benchmark
data sets of experimentally measured p<i>K</i><sub>a</sub> values, including 28 carboxylic acids, 10 aliphatic amines, and
45 thiols, were used to assess the optimized SMD model, which we call
SMD with a scaled solvent-accessible surface (SMD<sub>sSAS</sub>).
Of the methods tested, the M06-2X density functional approximation,
6-31+GĀ(d,p) basis set, and SMD<sub>sSAS</sub> solvent model provided
the most accurate p<i>K</i><sub>a</sub>s for each set, yielding
mean unsigned errors of 0.9, 0.4, and 0.5 p<i>K</i> units,
respectively, for carboxylic acids, aliphatic amines, and thiols.
This approach is therefore useful for efficiently calculating the
p<i>K</i><sub>a</sub>s of environmentally relevant functional
groups
Toward Quantitatively Accurate Calculation of the Redox-Associated AcidāBase and Ligand Binding Equilibria of Aquacobalamin
Redox processes in complex transition
metal-containing species
are often intimately associated with changes in ligand protonation
states and metal coordination number. A major challenge is therefore
to develop consistent computational approaches for computing pH-dependent
redox and ligand dissociation properties of organometallic species.
Reduction of the Co center in the vitamin B12 derivative aquacobalamin
can be accompanied by ligand dissociation, protonation, or both, making
these properties difficult to compute accurately. We examine this
challenge here by using density functional theory and continuum solvation
to compute Coāligand binding equilibrium constants (<i>K</i><sub>on/off</sub>), p<i>K</i><sub>a</sub>s, and
reduction potentials for models of aquacobalamin in aqueous solution.
We consider two models for cobalamin ligand coordination: the first
follows the hexa, penta, tetra coordination scheme for Co<sup>III</sup>, Co<sup>II</sup>, and Co<sup>I</sup> species, respectively, and
the second model features saturation of each vacant axial coordination
site on Co<sup>II</sup> and Co<sup>I</sup> species with a single,
explicit water molecule to maintain six directly interacting ligands
or water molecules in each oxidation state. Comparing these two coordination
schemes in combination with five dispersion-corrected density functionals,
we find that the accuracy of the computed properties is largely independent
of the scheme used, but including only a continuum representation
of the solvent yields marginally better results than saturating the
first solvation shell around Co throughout. PBE performs best, displaying
balanced accuracy and superior performance overall, with RMS errors
of 80 mV for seven reduction potentials, 2.0 log units for five p<i>K</i><sub>a</sub>s and 2.3 log units for two log <i>K</i><sub>on/off</sub> values for the aquacobalamin system. Furthermore,
we find that the BP86 functional commonly used in corrinoid studies
suffers from erratic behavior and inaccurate descriptions of Coāaxial
ligand binding, leading to substantial errors in predicted p<i>K</i><sub>a</sub>s and <i>K</i><sub>on/off</sub> values.
These findings demonstrate the effectiveness of the present approach
for computing electrochemical and thermodynamic properties of a complex
transition metal-containing cofactor
Torquoselective Ring Opening of Fused Cyclobutenamides: Evidence for a <i>Cis,Trans</i>-Cyclooctadienone Intermediate
Electrocyclic
ring opening of 4,6-fused cyclobutenamides <b>1</b> under thermal
conditions leads to <i>cis,trans</i>-cyclooctadienones <b>2</b>-<i>E</i>,<i>E</i> as transient intermediates,
en route to 5,5-bicyclic products <b>3</b>. Theoretical calculations
predict that 4,5-fused cyclobutenamides
should likewise undergo thermal ring opening, giving <i>cis,trans</i>-cycloheptadienones, but in this case conversion to 5,4-bicyclic
products is thermodynamically disfavored, and these cyclobutenamides
instead rearrange to vinyl cyclopentenones
Torquoselective Ring Opening of Fused Cyclobutenamides: Evidence for a <i>Cis,Trans</i>-Cyclooctadienone Intermediate
Electrocyclic
ring opening of 4,6-fused cyclobutenamides <b>1</b> under thermal
conditions leads to <i>cis,trans</i>-cyclooctadienones <b>2</b>-<i>E</i>,<i>E</i> as transient intermediates,
en route to 5,5-bicyclic products <b>3</b>. Theoretical calculations
predict that 4,5-fused cyclobutenamides
should likewise undergo thermal ring opening, giving <i>cis,trans</i>-cycloheptadienones, but in this case conversion to 5,4-bicyclic
products is thermodynamically disfavored, and these cyclobutenamides
instead rearrange to vinyl cyclopentenones
Torquoselective Ring Opening of Fused Cyclobutenamides: Evidence for a <i>Cis,Trans</i>-Cyclooctadienone Intermediate
Electrocyclic
ring opening of 4,6-fused cyclobutenamides <b>1</b> under thermal
conditions leads to <i>cis,trans</i>-cyclooctadienones <b>2</b>-<i>E</i>,<i>E</i> as transient intermediates,
en route to 5,5-bicyclic products <b>3</b>. Theoretical calculations
predict that 4,5-fused cyclobutenamides
should likewise undergo thermal ring opening, giving <i>cis,trans</i>-cycloheptadienones, but in this case conversion to 5,4-bicyclic
products is thermodynamically disfavored, and these cyclobutenamides
instead rearrange to vinyl cyclopentenones
Torquoselective Ring Opening of Fused Cyclobutenamides: Evidence for a <i>Cis,Trans</i>-Cyclooctadienone Intermediate
Electrocyclic
ring opening of 4,6-fused cyclobutenamides <b>1</b> under thermal
conditions leads to <i>cis,trans</i>-cyclooctadienones <b>2</b>-<i>E</i>,<i>E</i> as transient intermediates,
en route to 5,5-bicyclic products <b>3</b>. Theoretical calculations
predict that 4,5-fused cyclobutenamides
should likewise undergo thermal ring opening, giving <i>cis,trans</i>-cycloheptadienones, but in this case conversion to 5,4-bicyclic
products is thermodynamically disfavored, and these cyclobutenamides
instead rearrange to vinyl cyclopentenones
Torquoselective Ring Opening of Fused Cyclobutenamides: Evidence for a <i>Cis,Trans</i>-Cyclooctadienone Intermediate
Electrocyclic
ring opening of 4,6-fused cyclobutenamides <b>1</b> under thermal
conditions leads to <i>cis,trans</i>-cyclooctadienones <b>2</b>-<i>E</i>,<i>E</i> as transient intermediates,
en route to 5,5-bicyclic products <b>3</b>. Theoretical calculations
predict that 4,5-fused cyclobutenamides
should likewise undergo thermal ring opening, giving <i>cis,trans</i>-cycloheptadienones, but in this case conversion to 5,4-bicyclic
products is thermodynamically disfavored, and these cyclobutenamides
instead rearrange to vinyl cyclopentenones
Construction of Stereogenic Ī±,Ī±-Disubstituted Cycloalkanones via 1Ā° Amine Thiourea Dual Catalysis: Experimental Scope and Computational Analyses
The
mechanistic exploration and an expanded experimental discussion
of the organocatalyzed, asymmetric PfauādāAngelo reaction
by exploiting a bifunctional 1Ā° amine thiourea catalyst system
is disclosed. Notable breadth in substrate scope has been demonstrated
on both the cyclic ketone moiety and the Ī±,Ī²-unsaturated
electrophile. Exploration into the matched and mismatched selectivity
of this process with a ketone containing pre-existing stereocenters
has been demonstrated. Computational analyses of the reaction mechanism
are reported. In concert with kinetic isotope effect (KIE) experiments,
these computational results provide a detailed understanding of the
likely mechanism, including the aspects of the organocatalyst scaffold
that are critical for stereoselectivity
AlCl<sub>3</sub>āCatalyzed Ring Expansion Cascades of Bicyclic Cyclobutenamides Involving Highly Strained <i>Cis</i>,<i>Trans</i>-Cycloheptadienone Intermediates
We report the first experimental
evidence for the generation of
highly strained <i>cis</i>,<i>trans</i>-cycloheptadienones
by electrocyclic ring opening of 4,5-fused cyclobutenamides. In the
presence of AlCl<sub>3</sub>, the cyclobutenamides rearrange to [2.2.1]-bicyclic
ketones; DFT calculations provide evidence for a mechanism involving
torquoselective 4Ļ-electrocyclic ring opening to a <i>cis</i>,<i>trans</i>-cycloheptadienone followed by a Nazarov-like
recyclization and a 1,2-alkyl shift. Similarly, 4,6-fused cyclobutenamides
undergo AlCl<sub>3</sub>-catalyzed rearrangements to [3.2.1]-bicyclic
ketones through <i>cis</i>,<i>trans</i>-cyclooctadienone
intermediates. The products can be further elaborated via facile cascade
reactions to give complex tri- and tetracyclic molecules
Hyperconjugation Promotes Catalysis in a Pyridoxal 5ā²-Phosphate-Dependent Enzyme
Pyridoxal 5ā²-phosphate
(PLP)-dependent enzymes facilitate
reaction specificity by aligning the scissile Ļ-bond of the
PLP-substrate covalent complex perpendicular to the ring of the cofactor.
Current models propose that this alignment causes a destabilization
of the ground state. To test this hypothesis, quantum chemical calculations,
utilizing our recent neutron diffraction models of aspartate aminotransferase,
were performed. The calculations reveal that the scissile Ļ-bond
orbital overlaps significantly with the Ļ* orbital of the Schiff
base. This Ļ ā Ļ* hyperconjugation interaction
stabilizes the ground state of the external aldimine and substantially
contributes to transition-state stabilization by withdrawing electron
density from the CĪ±-H Ļ bond into the Ļ system of
PLP, enhancing the rate of catalysis