4.8 Article

Unraveling the Structure-Affinity Relationship between Cucurbit[n]urils (n=7, 8) and Cationic Diamondoids

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 139, Issue 8, Pages 3249-3258

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.7b00056

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [CHE-1404911]
  2. Croatian Ministry of Science, Education, and Sports [098-0982933-2911]
  3. Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts
  4. Ben-Gurion Univ. Scientific Relations Research Fund
  5. Czech Science Foundation [P208/12/G016]
  6. Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports of the Czech Republic [L01305]
  7. [RVO 61388963]
  8. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien
  9. Division Of Chemistry [1404911] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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We report the measurement of the binding constants (K-a) for cucurbit[n]uril (n = 7, 8) toward four series of guests based on 2,6-disubstituted adamantanes, 4,9-disubstituted diamantanes, 1,6-disubstituted diamantanes, and 1-substituted adamantane ammonium ions by direct and competitive H-1 NMR spectroscopy. Compared to the affinity of CB[7]Diam(NMe3)(2), the adamantane diammonium ion complexes (e.g., CB[7]2,6-Ad(NH3)(2) and CB[7]2,6-Ad(NMe3)(2)) are less effective at realizing the potential 1000-fold enhancement in affinity due to ion-dipole interactions at the second ureidyl C=O portal. Comparative crystallographic investigation of CB[7]Diam(NMe3)(2), CB[7]DiamNMe(3), and CB[7]1-AdNMe(3) revealed that the preferred geometry positions the +NMe3 groups approximate to 0.32 above the C=O portal; the observed 0.80 spacing observed for CB[7]Diam(NMe3)(2) reflects the simultaneous geometrical constraints of CH2O=C close contacts at both portals. Remarkably, the CB[8]IsoDiam(NHMe2)2 complex displays femtomolar binding affinity, placing it firmly alongside the CB[7]Diam(NMe3)(2) complex. Primary or quaternary ammonium ion looping strategies lead to larger increases in binding affinity for CB[8] than for CB[7], which we attribute to the larger size of the carbonyl portals of CB[8]; this suggests routes to develop CB[8] as the tightest binding host in the CB[n] family. We report that alkyl group fluorination (e.g., CB[7]1-AdNH(2)Et versus CB[7]1-AdNH(2)CH(2)CF(3)) does not result in the expected increase in Ka value. Finally, we discuss the role of solvation in nonempirical quantum mechanical computational methodology, which is used to estimate the relative changes in Gibbs binding free energies.

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