4 research outputs found
High-Fidelity Sequence-Selective Duplex Formation by Recognition-Encoded Melamine Oligomers.
Melamine oligomers composed of repeating triazine-piperidine units and equipped with phenol and phosphine oxide side-chains form H-bonded duplexes. The melamine backbone provides sufficient rigidity to prevent intramolecular folding of oligomers up to three recognition units in length, leading to reliable duplex formation between sequence complementary oligomers. NMR spectroscopy and isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) were used to characterize the self-assembly properties of the oligomers. For length-complementary homo-oligomers, duplex formation in toluene is characterized by an increase in stability of an order of magnitude for every base-pair added to the chain. NMR spectra of dilute solutions of the AD 2-mer show that intramolecular H-bonding between neighboring recognition units on the chain (1,2-folding) does not occur. NMR spectra of dilute solutions of both the AAD and the ADD 3-mer show that 1,3-folding does not take place either. ITC was used to characterize interactions between all pairwise combinations of the six different 3-mer sequences, and the sequence complementary duplexes are approximately an order of magnitude more stable than duplexes with a single base mismatch. High-fidelity duplex formation combined with the synthetic accessibility of the monomer building blocks makes these systems attractive targets for further investigation
Polarisation effects on the solvation properties of alcohols.
Alcohol solvents are significantly more polar than expected based on the measured H-bonding properties of monomeric alcohols in dilute solution. Self-association of alcohols leads to formation of cyclic aggregates and linear polymeric chains that have a different polarity from the alcohol monomer. Cyclic aggregates are less polar than the monomer, and the chain ends of linear polymers are more polar. The solvation properties of alcohols therefore depend on the interplay of these self-association equilibria and the equilibria involving interactions with solutes. Twenty-one different molecular recognition probes of varying polarity were used to probe the solvation properties of alkane-alcohol mixtures across a wide range of different solvent compositions. The results allow dissection of the complex equilibria present in these systems. Formation of a H-bond between two alcohol molecules leads to polarisation of the hydroxyl groups, resulting in an increase in binding affinity for subsequent interactions with the unbound donor and acceptor sites. The H-bond donor parameter (α) for these sites increases from 2.7 to 3.5, and the H-bond acceptor parameter (β) increases from 5.3 to 6.9. Polarisation is a short range effect limited to the first H-bond in a chain, and formation of subsequent H-bonds in longer chains does not further increase the polarity of chain ends. H-bond donor sites involved in a H-bond are unavailable for further interactions, because the formation of a bifurcated three-centre H-bond is three orders of magnitude less favourable than formation of a conventional two-centre H-bond. These findings are reproduced by quantum chemical calculations of the molecular electrostatic potential surfaces of alcohol aggregates. Thus, the overall solvation properties of alcohols depend on the speciation of different aggregates, the polarities of these species and the polarities of the solutes. At low alcohol concentrations, polar solutes are solvated by alcohol monomers, and at higher alcohol concentrations, solutes are solvated by the more polar chain ends of linear polymers. The less polar cyclic aggregates are less important for interactions with solutes. Similar behavior was found for ten different alcohol solvents. Tertiary alcohols are marginally less polar solvents than primary alcohols, due to steric interactions that destabilises the formation of polymeric aggregates leading to lower concentrations of polar chain ends. One alcohol with an electron-withdrawing substituent was studied, and this solvent showed slightly different behavior, because the H-bond donor and acceptor properties are different
Absolute Configurations of Fungal and Plant Metabolites by Chiroptical Methods. ORD, ECD, and VCD Studies on Phyllostin, Scytolide, and Oxysporone
The absolute configuration (AC) of the bioactive metabolites phyllostin (1) and scytolide (2), two hexahydro-1,4-benzodioxines produced by Phyllosticta cirsii, and oxysporone (3), a dihydrofuropyranone recently isolated from a strain of Diplodia africana, has been assigned by computational analysis of their optical rotatory dispersion (ORD), electronic circular dichroism (ECD), and vibrational circular dichroism (VCD) spectra. Computational prediction of ORD, ECD, and VCD allowed us to assign (3S,4aR,8S,8aR) AC to naturally occurring (−)-1, while (4aR,8S,8aR) AC was assigned to (−)-2 employing only ECD and VCD, because in this case ORD analysis turned out to be unsuitable for AC assignment. Theoretical prediction of both ORD and ECD spectra of 3 led to assignment of (4S,5R,6R) AC to (+)-3. In this case a satisfactory agreement between experimental and calculated VCD spectra was obtained only after taking into account solvent effects. This study shows that in the case of flexible and complex natural products only a concerted application of more than a single chiroptical technique permits unambiguous assignment of absolute configuration
Absolute Configurations of Fungal and Plant Metabolites by Chiroptical Methods. ORD, ECD, and VCD Studies on Phyllostin, Scytolide, and Oxysporone
The absolute configuration (AC) of
the bioactive metabolites phyllostin
(<b>1</b>) and scytolide (<b>2</b>), two hexahydro-1,4-benzodioxines
produced by <i>Phyllosticta cirsii</i>, and oxysporone (<b>3</b>), a dihydrofuropyranone recently isolated from a strain
of <i>Diplodia africana</i>, has been assigned by computational
analysis of their optical rotatory dispersion (ORD), electronic circular
dichroism (ECD), and vibrational circular dichroism (VCD) spectra.
Computational prediction of ORD, ECD, and VCD allowed us to assign
(3<i>S,</i>4a<i>R,</i>8<i>S,</i>8a<i>R</i>) AC to naturally occurring (−)-<b>1</b>,
while (4a<i>R,</i>8<i>S,</i>8a<i>R</i>) AC was assigned to (−)-<b>2</b> employing only ECD
and VCD, because in this case ORD analysis turned out to be unsuitable
for AC assignment. Theoretical prediction of both ORD and ECD spectra
of <b>3</b> led to assignment of (4<i>S,</i>5<i>R,</i>6<i>R</i>) AC to (+)-<b>3</b>. In this
case a satisfactory agreement between experimental and calculated
VCD spectra was obtained only after taking into account solvent effects.
This study shows that in the case of flexible and complex natural
products only a concerted application of more than a single chiroptical
technique permits unambiguous assignment of absolute configuration