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Published March 11, 2020 | Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Molecular Recognition and Cocrystallization of Methylated and Halogenated Fragments of Danicalipin A by Enantiopure Alleno-Acetylenic Cage Receptors

Abstract

Enantiopure (P)₄⁻ and (M)₄-configured alleno-acetylenic cage (AAC) receptors offer a highly defined interior for the complexation and structure elucidation of small molecule fragments of the stereochemically complex chlorosulfolipid danicalipin A. Solution (NMR), solid state (X-ray), and theoretical investigations of the formed host–guest complexes provide insight into the conformational preferences of 14 achiral and chiral derivatives of the danicalipin A chlorohydrin core in a confined, mostly hydrophobic environment, extending previously reported studies in polar solvents. The conserved binding mode of the guests permits deciphering the effect of functional group replacements on Gibbs binding energies ΔG. A strong contribution of conformational energies toward the binding affinities is revealed, which explains why the denser packing of larger apolar domains of the guests does not necessarily lead to higher association. Enantioselective binding of chiral guests, with energetic differences ΔΔG_(293 K) up to 0.7 kcal mol⁻¹ between diastereoisomeric complexes, is explained by hydrogen- and halogen-bonding, as well as dispersion interactions. Calorimetric studies (ITC) show that the stronger binding of one enantiomer is accompanied by an increased gain in enthalpy ΔH but at the cost of a larger entropic penalty TΔS stemming from tighter binding.

Additional Information

© 2020 American Chemical Society. Received: December 8, 2019; Published: March 1, 2020. We thank René Arnold and Rainer Frankenstein for recording NMR spectra, Michael Solar for recording single-crystal X-ray structures, and Dr. Anatol Schwab for valuable comments on the manuscript. C.G. was supported by the Studienstiftung des Deutschen Volkes. We are grateful for the support by the ETH Research Council (ETH-01 13-2) and the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF 200020_159802). The authors declare no competing financial interest. CCDC data can be obtained free of charge from The Cambridge Crystallographic Data Centre.

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August 19, 2023
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