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Quantification of CH-π Interactions Using Calix[4]pyrrole Receptors as Model Systems

We describe the use of two series of aryl-extended calix[4]pyrrole receptors bearing two and four electronically tunable phenyl groups, respectively, in their meso-positions as model systems for the quantification of CH-π interactions in solution. The “four-wall” and the “two-wall” receptors formed...

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Autores principales: Aragay, Gemma, Hernández, Daniel, Verdejo, Begoña, Escudero-Adán, Eduardo C., Martínez, Marta, Ballester, Pablo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6332063/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26389866
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules200916672
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author Aragay, Gemma
Hernández, Daniel
Verdejo, Begoña
Escudero-Adán, Eduardo C.
Martínez, Marta
Ballester, Pablo
author_facet Aragay, Gemma
Hernández, Daniel
Verdejo, Begoña
Escudero-Adán, Eduardo C.
Martínez, Marta
Ballester, Pablo
author_sort Aragay, Gemma
collection PubMed
description We describe the use of two series of aryl-extended calix[4]pyrrole receptors bearing two and four electronically tunable phenyl groups, respectively, in their meso-positions as model systems for the quantification of CH-π interactions in solution. The “four-wall” and the “two-wall” receptors formed thermodynamically stable 1:1 complexes in acetonitrile solution with both trimethylamine N-oxide and trimethylphosphine P-oxide as guests. The complexes were mainly stabilized by the formation of four convergent hydrogen bonds between the oxygen atom of the guests and the pyrrole NHs of the host. In general, the N-oxide produced thermodynamically more stable hydrogen bonding interactions than the P-oxide. Upon guest binding, the receptors adopted the cone conformation and the methyl groups of the included guests engaged in CH-π interactions with the aromatic walls. We show that the modification of the electronic properties of the aromatic surfaces, in any of the receptor series, did not have a significant impact in the measured binding affinities for a given guest. However, the larger binding affinities determined for the “four-wall” receptors in comparison to the “two-wall” counterparts supported the importance of CH-π interactions on guest complexation. The strength of the CH-π interactions present in the inclusion complexes was quantified employing the octamethyl calix[4]pyrrole as reference. We determined an average magnitude of ~1 kcal·mol(−1) for each CH-π interaction. The CH-π interactions featured a reduced electrostatic nature and thus dispersion forces were assigned as main contributors of their strength.
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spelling pubmed-63320632019-01-24 Quantification of CH-π Interactions Using Calix[4]pyrrole Receptors as Model Systems Aragay, Gemma Hernández, Daniel Verdejo, Begoña Escudero-Adán, Eduardo C. Martínez, Marta Ballester, Pablo Molecules Article We describe the use of two series of aryl-extended calix[4]pyrrole receptors bearing two and four electronically tunable phenyl groups, respectively, in their meso-positions as model systems for the quantification of CH-π interactions in solution. The “four-wall” and the “two-wall” receptors formed thermodynamically stable 1:1 complexes in acetonitrile solution with both trimethylamine N-oxide and trimethylphosphine P-oxide as guests. The complexes were mainly stabilized by the formation of four convergent hydrogen bonds between the oxygen atom of the guests and the pyrrole NHs of the host. In general, the N-oxide produced thermodynamically more stable hydrogen bonding interactions than the P-oxide. Upon guest binding, the receptors adopted the cone conformation and the methyl groups of the included guests engaged in CH-π interactions with the aromatic walls. We show that the modification of the electronic properties of the aromatic surfaces, in any of the receptor series, did not have a significant impact in the measured binding affinities for a given guest. However, the larger binding affinities determined for the “four-wall” receptors in comparison to the “two-wall” counterparts supported the importance of CH-π interactions on guest complexation. The strength of the CH-π interactions present in the inclusion complexes was quantified employing the octamethyl calix[4]pyrrole as reference. We determined an average magnitude of ~1 kcal·mol(−1) for each CH-π interaction. The CH-π interactions featured a reduced electrostatic nature and thus dispersion forces were assigned as main contributors of their strength. MDPI 2015-09-14 /pmc/articles/PMC6332063/ /pubmed/26389866 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules200916672 Text en © 2015 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Aragay, Gemma
Hernández, Daniel
Verdejo, Begoña
Escudero-Adán, Eduardo C.
Martínez, Marta
Ballester, Pablo
Quantification of CH-π Interactions Using Calix[4]pyrrole Receptors as Model Systems
title Quantification of CH-π Interactions Using Calix[4]pyrrole Receptors as Model Systems
title_full Quantification of CH-π Interactions Using Calix[4]pyrrole Receptors as Model Systems
title_fullStr Quantification of CH-π Interactions Using Calix[4]pyrrole Receptors as Model Systems
title_full_unstemmed Quantification of CH-π Interactions Using Calix[4]pyrrole Receptors as Model Systems
title_short Quantification of CH-π Interactions Using Calix[4]pyrrole Receptors as Model Systems
title_sort quantification of ch-π interactions using calix[4]pyrrole receptors as model systems
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6332063/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26389866
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules200916672
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