998 resultados para Chiral recognition
Resumo:
Zusammenfassung Die Arbeit beschreibt die Synthese und Eigenschaften von formtreuen organischen Makrocyclen mit intraannularen polaren Gruppen. Dabei wurden zunächst entsprechende bifunktionalisierte Acetylenbausteine (Halbringe) hergestellt, welche anschließend in einer oxidativen Glaser-Eglington Kupplung zu den Makrocyclen umgesetzt wurden.Am Anfang wurden Sulfonat-funktionalisierte Makrocyclen untersucht. Diese ließen sich mittels der Templatmethode in hohen Ausbeuten synthetisieren. Nach der Abspaltung des Templatbausteins, der gleichzeitig als Schutzgruppe für die Sulfonsäure diente, erhielt man den entsprechenden Makrocyclus als Tetra-n-butylammonium-Salz. Vor dem Hintergrund ionenleitfähige Materialien zu erhalten, wurde anschließend das organische Kation durch anorganische Kationen (z.B. Li+, Na+) ausgetauscht. Dies führte jedoch zur Bildung unlöslicher Produkte, die sich nicht eindeutig charakterisierten ließen.Ein anderer Ansatz zu löslichen Makrocyclen mit polarem Innenraum zu gelangen war die Synthese eines Dipeptid-funktionalisierten Makrocyclus. Dies geschah im Hinblick auf die eventuelle Eignung der Makrocyclen als Rezeptormoleküle für Gäste biologischen Ursprungs. Dabei ließen sich die entsprechenden Dipeptid-funktionalisierten Halbringe auf einfache Weise darstellen, jedoch trat bei der anschließenden Glaser-Kupplung, wahrscheinlich bedingt durch den hohen molaren Überschuß an Kupfersalzen, als Hauptreaktion die Abspaltung des Peptidrests auf. Daher wurde sich nun der Carbonsäuregruppe als polaren Baustein im Inneren der Ringe zugewandt. Diese sollten eine anschließende Peptidankupplung zulassen.Es wurden vier verschiedene Makrocyclen mit intraannularen Carboxylatgruppen synthetisiert. Auch hier waren die Makrocyclen in Form ihrer Methylester noch gut, in Form der Säuren oder deren Salze oftmals nur noch sehr gering löslich. Um die Löslichkeit zu verbessern, wurde dabei die Polaritätsverteilung am Ring (polarer Innenraum, unpolarer Außenraum) durch das Anbringen von löslichkeits-vermittelnden Gruppen zum Teil aufgegeben. Dabei hat sich gezeigt, daß es erst durch die Verwendung von verzweigten (S)-Methylbutoxy-Gruppen innerhalb des Rings oder langen Alkoxyketten außerhalb des Rings möglich war, zu löslichen Systemen zu gelangen. Im ersten Fall ist es zum ersten Mal gelungen, einen löslichen Makrocyclus mit zwei freien intra-annnularen Carbonsäuregruppen zu erhalten. Durch die Optimierung der Syntheseroute ist es nunmehr möglich, den Ring im Grammmaßstab herzustellen. Außerdem wurden als Testreaktion beide Säuregruppen mit Methylamin zum Säureamid vollständig umgesetzt. Somit wurde ein System entwickelt, an das sich in Zukunft beliebige Aminosäuren an den Ring anbinden lassen sollten. Zusätzlich sollte sich die Chiralität der (S)-Methylbutoxygruppen auf das Erkennen von chiralen Gästen auswirken.Im zweiten Fall wurden durch das Anbringen von vier Tris(hexadecyloxy)-benzol- oder Tris(dodecyloxy)-benzol- Gruppen an der Peripherie der Ringe nach Hydrolyse der Methylestergruppen ebenfalls lösliche, Carboxylat-funktionalisierte Makrocyclen erhalten. Eine eingehende Untersuchung der Methylester-geschützten Ringe ergab, daß diese beim Schmelzen das Auftreten einer thermotropen flüssigkristallinen Phase zeigen. Die Natur der Mesophase konnte mittels Polarisations-Lichtmikroskopie sowie Röntgenbeugungsmethoden eindeutig als kolumnar-schiefwinklig (colob) charakterisiert werden. Hierbei ist zu bemerken, daß bei ähnlichen Makrocyclen, die über keinen polar gefüllten Innenraum verfügen, keine Mesophase auftritt. Das bedeutet, daß die Raumerfüllung im Inneren der Makrocyclen, bedingt durch die polaren Gruppen, zur Ausbildung einer flüssigkristallinen Phase unbedingt notwendig ist.
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The work described herein is aimed at understanding primary and secondary aggregation of bile salt micelles and how micelles can perform chiral recognition of binapthyl analytes. Previous work with cholate and deoxycholate using micellar electrokinetic chromatography (MEKC) and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) has provided insightinto cholate and deoxycholate micelle formation, especially with respect to the critical micelle concentration (CMC). Chiral separations of the model analyte, 1,1â??-binaphthyl-2,2â??-diyl hydrogen phosphate (BNDHP), via cholate (C) and deoxycholate (DC) mediated MEKC separataions previously have shown the DC CMC to be 7-10 mM andthe cholate CMC at 14 mM at ph 12. A second model analyte,1,1â??-binaphthol (BN), was also previously investigated to probe micellar structure, but the MEKC data for this analyte implied a higher CMC, which may be interpreted as secondary aggregation. Thiswork extends the investigation of bile salts to include pulsed field gradient spin echo (PFGSE) NMR experiments being used to gain information about the size and degree of polydispersity of cholate and deoxycholate micelles. Concentrations of cholate below 10mM show a large variation in effective radius likely due to the existence of transient preliminary aggregates. The onset of the primary micelle shows a dramatic increase in effective radius of the micelle in cholate and deoxycholate. In the region of expectedsecondary aggregation a gradual increase of effective radius was observed with cholate; deoxycholate showed a persistent aggregate size in the secondary micelle region that is modulated by the presence of an analyte molecule. Effective radii of cholate anddeoxycholate (individually) were compared with and without R- and S-BNDHP in order to observe the effective radius difference of micelles with and without analyte present. The presence of S-BNDHP consistently resulted in a larger effective aggregate radius incholate and deoxycholate, confirming previous data of the S-BNDHP interacting more with the micelle than R-BNDHP. In total, various NMR techniques, like diffusion NMR can be used to gain a greater understanding of the bile salt micellization process and chiral resolution.
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Enantioselective catalysis is an increasingly important method of providing enantiomeric compounds for the pharmaceutical and agrochemical industries. To date, heterogeneous catalysts have failed to match the industrial impact achieved by homogeneous systems. One successful approach to the creation of heterogeneous enantioselective catalysts has involved the modification of conventional metal particle catalysts by the adsorption of chiral molecules. This article examines the contribution of effects such as chiral recognition and amplification to these types of system and how insight provided by surface science model studies may be exploited in the design of more effective catalysts.
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The design of synthetic molecules that recognize specific sequences of DNA is an ongoing challenge in molecular medicine. Cell-permeable small molecules targeting predetermined DNA sequences offer a potential approach for offsetting the abnormal effects of misregulated gene-expression. Over the past twenty years, Professor Peter B. Dervan has developed a set of pairing rules for the rational design of minor groove binding polyamides containing pyrrole (Py), imidazole (Im), and hydroxypyrrole (Hp). Polyamides have illustrated the capability to permeate cells and inhibit transcription of specific genes in vivo. This provides impetus to identify structural elements that expand the repetoire of polyamide motifs with recognition properties comparable to naturally occurring DNA binding proteins. Through the introduction of chiral amino acids, we have developed chiral polyamides with stereochemically regulated binding characteristics. In addition, chiral substituents have facilitated the development of new polyamide motifs that broaden binding site sizes targetable by this class of ligands.
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This paper compares and contrasts, for the first time, one- and two-component gelation systems that are direct structural analogues and draws conclusions about the molecular recognition pathways that underpin fibrillar self-assembly. The new one-component systems comprise L-lysine-based dendritic headgroups covalently connected to an aliphatic diamine spacer chain via an amide bond, One-component gelators with different generations of headgroup (from first to third generation) and different length spacer chains are reported. The self-assembly of these dendrimers in toluene was elucidated using thermal measurements, circular dichroism (CD) and NMR spectroscopies, scanning electron microscopy (SEM), and small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS). The observations are compared with previous results for the analogous two-component gelation system in which the dendritic headgroups are bound to the aliphatic spacer chain noncovalently via acid-amine interactions. The one-component system is inherently a more effective gelator, partly as a consequence of the additional covalent amide groups that provide a new hydrogen bonding molecular recognition pathway, whereas the two-component analogue relies solely on intermolecular hydrogen bond interactions between the chiral dendritic headgroups. Furthermore, because these amide groups are important in the assembly process for the one-component system, the chiral information preset in the dendritic headgroups is not always transcribed into the nanoscale assembly, whereas for the two-component system, fiber formation is always accompanied by chiral ordering because the molecular recognition pathway is completely dependent on hydrogen bond interactions between well-organized chiral dendritic headgroups.
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The terpenoid chiral selectors dehydroabietic acid, 12,14-dinitrodehydroabietic acid and friedelin have been covalently linked to silica gel yielding three chiral stationary phases CSP 1, CSP 2 and CSP 3, respectively. The enantiodiscriminating capability of each one of these phases was evaluated by HPLC with four families of chiral aromatic compounds composed of alcohols, amines, phenylalanine and tryptophan amino acid derivatives and beta-lactams. The CSP 3 phase, containing a selector with a large friedelane backbone is particularly suitable for resolving free alcohols and their derivatives bearing fluorine substituents, while CSP 2 with a dehydroabietic architecture is the only phase that efficiently discriminates 1, 1'-binaphthol atropisomers. CSP 3 also gives efficient resolution of the free amines. All three phases resolve well the racemates of N-trifluoracetyl and N-3,5-dinitrobenzoyl phenylalanine amino acid ester derivatives. Good enantioseparation of beta-lactams and N-benzoyl tryptophan amino acid derivatives was achieved on CSP 1. In order to understand the structural factors that govern the chiral molecular recognition ability of these phases, molecular dynamics simulations were carried out in the gas phase with binary diastereomeric complexes formed by the selectors of CSP 1 and CSP 2 and several amino acid derivatives. Decomposition of molecular mechanics energies shows that van der Waals interactions dominate the formation of the diastereomeric transient complexes while the electrostatic binding interactions are primarily responsible for the enantioselective binding of the (R)- and (S)-analytes. Analysis of the hydrogen bonds shows that electrostatic interactions are mainly associated with the formation of N-(HO)-O-...=C enantio selective hydrogen bonds between the amide binding sites from the selectors and the carbonyl groups of the analytes. The role of mobile phase polarity, a mixture of n-hexane and propan-2-ol in different ratios, was also evaluated through molecular dynamics simulations in explicit solvent. (c) 2006 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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To investigate the molecular mechanism for stereospecific binding of agonists to beta 2-adrenergic receptors we used receptor models to identify potential binding sites for the beta-OH-group of the ligand, which defines the chiral center. Ser-165, located in transmembrane helix IV, and Asn-293, situated in the upper half of transmembrane helix VI, were identified as potential binding sites. Mutation of Ser-165 to Ala did not change the binding of either isoproterenol isomer as revealed after transient expression in human embryonic kidney (HEK)-293 cells. In contrast, a receptor mutant in which Asn-293 was replaced by Leu showed substantial loss of stereospecific isoproterenol binding. Adenylyl cyclase stimulation by this mutant after stable expression in CHO cells confirmed the substantial loss of stereospecificity for isoproterenol. In a series of agonists the loss of affinity in the Leu-293 mutant receptor was strongly correlated with the intrinsic activity of the compounds. Full agonists showed a 10-30-fold affinity loss, whereas partial agonists had almost the same affinity for both receptors. Stereospecific recognition of antagonists was unaltered in the Leu-293 mutant receptor. These data indicate a relationship between stereospecificity and intrinsic activity of agonists and suggest that Asn-293 is important for both properties of the agonist-receptor interaction.
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Few reported inhibitors of secretory phospholipase A(2) enzymes inhibit the IIa human isoform (hnpsPLA(2)-IIa) noncovalently at submicromolar concentrations. Herein, the simple chiral precursor D-tyrosine was derivastised to give a series of potent new inhibitors of hnpsPLA(2)-IIa. A 2.2-Angstrom crystal structure shows an inhibitor bound in the active site of the enzyme, chelated to a Ca2+ ion through carboxylate and amide oxygen atoms, H bonded through an amide NH group to His48, with multiple hydrophobic contacts and a T-shaped aromatic-group-His6 interaction. Antiinflammatory activity is also demonstrated for two compounds administered orally to rats.
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This paper investigates the effectiveness of virtual product placement as a marketing tool by examining the relationship between brand recall and recognition and virtual product placement. It also aims to address a gap in the existing academic literature by focusing on the impact of product placement on recall and recognition of new brands. The growing importance of product placement is discussed and a review of previous research on product placement and virtual product placement is provided. The research methodology used to study the recall and recognition effects of virtual product placement are described and key findings presented. Finally, implications are discussed and recommendations for future research provided.