Enumeration of Virtual Libraries of Combinatorial
Modular Macrocyclic (Bracelet, Necklace) Architectures and Their Linear
Counterparts
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Abstract
A wide
variety of cyclic molecular architectures are built of modular subunits
and can be formed combinatorially. The mathematics for enumeration
of such objects is well-developed yet lacks key features of importance
in chemistry, such as specifying (i) the structures of individual
members among a set of isomers, (ii) the distribution (i.e., relative
amounts) of products, and (iii) the effect of nonequal ratios of reacting
monomers on the product distribution. Here, a software program (<i>Cyclaplex</i>) has been developed to determine the number, identity
(including isomers), and relative amounts of linear and cyclic architectures
from a given number and ratio of reacting monomers. The program includes
both mathematical formulas and generative algorithms for enumeration;
the latter go beyond the former to provide desired molecular-relevant
information and data-mining features. The program is equipped to enumerate
four types of architectures: (i) linear architectures with directionality
(macroscopic equivalent = electrical extension cords), (ii) linear
architectures without directionality (batons), (iii) cyclic architectures
with directionality (necklaces), and (iv) cyclic architectures without
directionality (bracelets). The program can be applied to cyclic peptides,
cycloveratrylenes, cyclens, calixarenes, cyclodextrins, crown ethers,
cucurbiturils, annulenes, expanded meso-substituted porphyrin(ogen)s,
and diverse supramolecular (e.g., protein) assemblies. The size of
accessible architectures encompasses up to 12 modular subunits derived
from 12 reacting monomers or larger architectures (e.g. 13–17
subunits) from fewer types of monomers (e.g. 2–4). A particular
application concerns understanding the possible heterogeneity of (natural
or biohybrid) photosynthetic light-harvesting oligomers (cyclic, linear)
formed from distinct peptide subunits