We synthesized two series of compounds in which a nitroxide
radical
and a fullerene C60 moiety were kept separated by a 310-helical peptide bridge containing two intramolecular CO···H–N
hydrogen bonds. The direction of the resulting molecular dipole moment
could be reversed by switching the position of fullerene and nitroxide
with respect to the peptide nitrogen and carbon termini. The resulting
fullerene–peptide–radical systems were compared to the
behaviors of otherwise identical peptides but lacking either C60 or the free radical moiety. Electrochemical analysis and
chemical nitroxide reduction experiments show that the dipole moment
of the helix significantly affects the redox properties of both electroactive
groups. Besides providing evidence of a folded helical conformation
for the peptide bridge, IR and NMR results highlight a strong effect
of peptide orientation on the spectral patterns, pointing to a specific
interaction of one of the helical orientations with the C60 moiety. Time-resolved EPR spectra show not only that for both systems
triplet quenching by nitroxide induces spin polarization of the radical
spin sublevels, but also that the coupling interaction can be either
weak or strong depending on the orientation of the peptide dipole.
As opposed to the concept of dyads, the molecules investigated are
thus better described as fullerene–peptide–radical systems
to stress the active role of the bridge as an important ingredient
capable of tuning the system’s physicochemical properties