18 research outputs found

    Highly efficient catalysis of the Kemp elimination in the cavity of a cubic coordination cage.

    Get PDF
    The hollow cavities of coordination cages can provide an environment for enzyme-like catalytic reactions of small-molecule guests. Here, we report a new example (catalysis of the Kemp elimination reaction of benzisoxazole with hydroxide to form 2-cyanophenolate) in the cavity of a water-soluble M8L12 coordination cage, with two features of particular interest. First, the rate enhancement is among the largest observed to date: at pD 8.5, the value of kcat/kuncat is 2 × 10(5), due to the accumulation of a high concentration of partially desolvated hydroxide ions around the bound guest arising from ion-pairing with the 16+ cage. Second, the catalysis is based on two orthogonal interactions: (1) hydrophobic binding of benzisoxazole in the cavity and (2) polar binding of hydroxide ions to sites on the cage surface, both of which were established by competition experiments

    Neurotransmitter selection by monoamine oxidase isoforms, dissected in terms of functional groups by mixed double mutant cycles

    Get PDF
    Double mutant cycles were constructed using neurotransmitters and synthetic substrates that measure their selective binding to one monoamine oxidase (MAO) enzyme isoform over another as a function of structural change. This work measures a reduction in selectivity for the MAOB isoform of 3 to 9.5 kJ mol−1 upon the addition of hydroxy functional groups to a phenethylamine scaffold. Replacement of hydroxy functional groups on the phenethylamine scaffold by hydrophobic substituents measures an increase in selectivity for MAOB of −1.1 to −6.9 kJ mol−1. The strategies presented here can be applied to the development of competitive reversible inhibitors of MAO enzymes and other targets with structurally related isoforms

    Mapping the internal recognition surface of an octanuclear coordination cage using guest libraries

    Get PDF
    Size and shape criteria for guest binding inside the cavity of an octanuclear cubic coordination cage in water have been established using a new fluorescence displacement assay to quantify guest binding. For aliphatic cyclic ketones of increasing size (from C5 to C11), there is a linear relationship between ΔG for guest binding and the guest’s surface area: the change in ΔG for binding is 0.3 kJ mol–1 Å–2, corresponding to 5 kJ mol–1 for each additional CH2 group in the guest, in good agreement with expectations based on hydrophobic desolvation. The highest association constant is K = 1.2 × 106 M–1 for cycloundecanone, whose volume is approximately 50% of the cavity volume; for larger C12 and C13 cyclic ketones, the association constant progressively decreases as the guests become too large. For a series of C10 aliphatic ketones differing in shape but not size, ΔG for guest binding showed no correlation with surface area. These guests are close to the volume limit of the cavity (cf. Rebek’s 55% rule), so the association constant is sensitive to shape complementarity, with small changes in guest structure resulting in large changes in binding affinity. The most flexible members of this series (linear aliphatic ketones) did not bind, whereas the more preorganized cyclic ketones all have association constants of 104–105 M–1. A crystal structure of the cage·cycloundecanone complex shows that the guest carbonyl oxygen is directed into a binding pocket defined by a convergent set of CH groups, which act as weak hydrogen-bond donors, and also shows close contacts between the exterior surface of the disc-shaped guest and the interior surface of the pseudospherical cage cavity despite the slight mismatch in shape

    An Interconverting Family of Coordination Cages and a meso-Helicate; Effects of Temperature, Concentration, and Solvent on the Product Distribution of a Self-Assembly Process

    Get PDF
    The self-assembly between a water-soluble bis-bidentate ligand L<sup>18w</sup> and Co­(II) salts in water affords three high-spin Co­(II) products: a dinuclear <i>meso</i>-helicate [Co<sub>2</sub>(L<sup>18w</sup>)<sub>3</sub>]­X<sub>4</sub>; a tetrahedral cage [Co<sub>4</sub>(L<sup>18w</sup>)<sub>6</sub>]­X<sub>8</sub>; and a dodecanuclear truncated-tetrahedral cage [Co<sub>12</sub>(L<sup>18w</sup>)<sub>18</sub>]­X<sub>24</sub> (X = BF<sub>4</sub> or ClO<sub>4</sub>). All three products were crystallized under different conditions and structurally characterized. In [Co<sub>2</sub>(L<sup>18w</sup>)<sub>3</sub>]­X<sub>4</sub> all three bridging ligands span a pair of metal ions; in the two larger products, there is a metal ion at each vertex of the Co<sub>4</sub> or Co<sub>12</sub> polyhedral cage array with a bridging ligand spanning a pair of metal ions along every edge. All three structural types are known: what is unusual here is the presence of all three from the same reaction. The assemblies <b>Co</b><sub><b>2</b></sub>, <b>Co</b><sub><b>4</b></sub>, and <b>Co</b><sub><b>12</b></sub> are in slow equilibrium (hours/days) in aqueous solution, and this can be conveniently monitored by <sup>1</sup>H NMR spectroscopy because (i) the paramagnetism of Co­(II) disperses the signals over a range of ca. 200 ppm and (ii) the different symmetries of the three species give characteristically different numbers of independent <sup>1</sup>H NMR signals, which makes identification easy. From temperature- and concentration-dependent <sup>1</sup>H NMR studies it is clear that increasing temperature and increasing dilution favors fragmentation to give a larger proportion of the smaller assemblies for entropic reasons. High concentrations and low temperature favor the larger assembly despite the unfavorable entropic and electrostatic factors associated with its formation. We suggest that this arises from the hydrophobic effect: reorganization of several smaller complexes into one larger one results in a smaller proportion of the hydrophobic ligand surface being exposed to water, with a larger proportion of the ligand surface protected in the interior of the assembly. In agreement with this, <sup>1</sup>H NMR spectra in a nonaqueous solvent (MeNO<sub>2</sub>) show formation of only [Co<sub>2</sub>(L<sup>18w</sup>)<sub>3</sub>]­X<sub>4</sub> because the driving force for reorganization into larger assemblies is now absent. Thus, we can identify the contributions of temperature, concentration, and solvent on the result of the metal/ligand self-assembly process and have determined the speciation behavior of the <b>Co</b><sub><b>2</b></sub>/<b>Co</b><sub><b>4</b></sub>/<b>Co</b><sub><b>12</b></sub> system in aqueous solution

    [CrIII8MII6]12+ Coordination Cubes (MII=Cu, Co)

    Get PDF
    Four [CrIII8MII6]n+ (MII = Cu, Co) coordination cubes of formulae [Cr8Co6L24Cl12] (1), [Cr8Co6L24(SCN)12] (2), [Cr8Cu6L24(H2O)12](SO4)6 (3), and [Cr8Cu6L24Cl12] (4) (where HL is 1-(4-pyridyl)butane-1,3-dione), were synthesised using the [CrIIIL3] metalloligand in combination with a variety of MII salts. The metallic skeleton of each cage describes a cube in which the [CrIIIL3] moieties occupy the eight vertices and the MII ions lie at the centre of the six faces. The axial coordination sites of the MII cations are occupied by either H2O molecules or Cl?/SCN? anions originating from the MII salt used in the synthesis, resulting in neutral 1, 2 and 4 and the cage in 3 being a 12+ cation; the charge-balancing SO42? anions accommodated both inside and outside the cube. Magnetic susceptibility and magnetisation measurements reveal weak exchange between nearest neighbour metal ions, mediated via the L? ligands. The modular assembly of the cubes suggests that any combination of [MIIIL3] metalloligand and MII salt will work, potentially resulting in an enormous family of supramolecular assemblies. The charge of the cubes is controlled by the nature of the ligand occupying the axial sites on the MII ions, suggesting trivial ligand exchange may offer control over, amongst others, solubility, reactivity, post-synthetic modification and substrate specificity. The large internal cavities of the cubes also suggest host–guest chemistry may be a fruiful route to encapsulating magnetic and/or redox active guests which could be employed to control magnetic behaviour, and the construction of multifunctional materials

    Shape-, size-, and functional group-selective binding of small organic guests in a paramagnetic coordination cage

    No full text
    A cubic coordination cage acts in MeCN as a host for neutral organic guests which contain an H-bond-accepting group that interacts with the internal surface of the cage. The different thermodynamic contributions to guest recognition and the kinetics of both guest binding and reorganization inside the cavity have been analyzed in detail by 1H NMR spectroscopy, which is facilitated by the paramagnetism of the host cage
    corecore