4.7 Article

Inside or outside the box? Effect of substrate location on coordination-cage based catalysis

Journal

DALTON TRANSACTIONS
Volume 51, Issue 30, Pages 11277-11285

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d2dt01713j

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation [P2FRP2/199583]
  2. Development and Promotion of Science and Technology Talents Project, Thailand
  3. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) [P2FRP2_199583] Funding Source: Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)

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In this study, we compared and contrasted the hydrolysis reactions of two different aromatic esters using an octanuclear cubic Co-8 coordination cage as the catalyst. The results showed that exterior-surface catalysis can be effective and potentially general, while cavity-binding of guests can result in negative catalysis.
In this work we compare and contrast the hydrolysis of two different aromatic esters using an octanuclear cubic Co-8 coordination cage host as the catalyst. Diacetyl fluorescein (DAF) is too large to bind inside the cage cavity, but in aqueous solution it interacts with the exterior surface of the cage via a hydrophobic interaction with K = 1.5(2) x 10(4) M-1. This is sufficient to bring it into close proximity to the layer of hydroxide ions which also surrounds the 16+ cage surface even at modest pH values, accelerating the hydrolysis of DAF to fluorescein with k(cat)/k(uncat) (the rate acceleration for that fraction of DAF in contact with the cage surface in the equilibrium) approximate to 50. This is far smaller than many known examples of catalysis inside a cage cavity, but at the exterior surface it is potentially general with no cavity-imposed size/shape limitations for guest binding. In contrast 4-nitrophenyl acetate (4NPA) binds inside the cage cavity with K = 3.5(3) x 10(3) M-1 and as such is surrounded in solution by the hydroxide ions which accumulate around the cage surface. However its hydrolysis is actually inhibited: either because of a geometrically unfavourable geometry of the bound substrate which makes it inaccessible to surface-bound hydroxide, or because the necessary volume expansion/geometry change associated with formation of a tetrahedral intermediate cannot be accommodated inside the cavity. Any 4NPA that is free in solution as part of the equilibrium undergoes catalysed hydrolysis at the cage exterior surface in the same way as DAF, but the effect is limited by the low affinity of 4NPA for the exterior surface. We conclude that exterior-surface catalysis can be effective and potentially general; and that cavity-binding of guests can result in negative, rather than positive, catalysis.

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