Aromatic Interactions by Molecular Tweezers and Clips in Chemical and Biological Systems

被引:139
|
作者
Klaerner, Frank-Gerrit [1 ]
Schrader, Thomas [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Duisburg Essen, Inst Organ Chem, D-45117 Essen, Germany
关键词
HYDROGEN-BONDED COMPLEXES; N-ALKYLPYRIDINIUM SALTS; HOST-GUEST COMPLEXES; SELECTIVE COMPLEXATION; RECOGNITION; DENDRIMERS; BINDING; INCLUSION; RECEPTORS; DYNAMICS;
D O I
10.1021/ar300061c
中图分类号
O6 [化学];
学科分类号
0703 ;
摘要
Noncovalent interactions involving aromatic rings, such as pi-stacking and CH-pi, occur throughout a range of fundamental processes including self-assembly and (bio)catalysis. Molecular dips and tweezers possess a central parallel or torus-shaped cavity with a surrounding belt of convergent aromatic rings; hence these structures exploit multiple aromatic interactions in a positively cooperative manner. Both clips and tweezers demonstrate selective binding of cationic or neutral guests that bear acceptor groups. The electrostatic surface potentials (ESP) explain this unexpected behavior: calculated ESPs were highly negative inside the tweezer or dip cavity, providing complementary profiles to the positive ESP plots of their preferred guest molecules. This Account presents more complex systems that use aromatic dips and tweezers to alter the reactivities of included guest species, to distinguish between guest enantiomers, and to interfere with biological processes such as enzymatic activity and protein aggregation. Napthalene tweezers show potential applications in organocatalysis. When pyridinium moieties are bound within the spacious cavity of naphthyl-spaced tweezers, the resulting complex significantly influences the first step of single-electron reductions of (bi)pyridinium salts. In addition, the environment within the tweezer cavity strongly accelerates the Menshutkin reaction (the alkylation of pyridine derivatives). Introduction of phosphonate, phosphate, or sulfate anions into the central aromatic bridge renders dips and tweezers water-soluble. Larger systems form extremely tight intertwined dimers that rely on the nonclassical hydrophobic effect for their stability. Smaller dips and tweezers with a simple benzene bridge remain monomeric in buffered aqueous solution and display a complementary binding profile. While the clips with parallel sidewalls prefer flat aromatic cations such as pyridinium salts, the torus-shaped tweezers bind to basic amino adds lysine and arginine via a threading process. These mutually exclusive binding modes make water-soluble dips and tweezers valuable tools for probing critical biological interactions with positively charged amino add side chains and cofactors. Molecular dips and tweezers can be employed for the complete inhibition of dehydrogenases. The dip extracts NAD(+) from its Rossman fold, while the tweezer complexes access strategic lysine residues around the active site. Our new enzyme inhibitors recognize the protein surface and thus offer additional targets for medicinal chemistry. Finally, the ability of molecular tweezers to cap critical lysine residues can be used to interfere with the pathology of protein misfolding diseases such as Alzheimer's disease, because many of them involve noncovalent interactions with these critical residues during their early stages. When the key protein produces a beta-sheet-rich nucleus, this structure undergoes spontaneous polymerization into highly toxic oligomers, ultimately leading to mature fibrils. The benzene-spaced phosphate tweezer forms a specific complex with lysine residues 16 and 28 in A beta 42 and thus prevents the formation of misfolded oligomers rich in beta-sheets. This entirely new process-specific mechanism that prevents pathologic protein aggregation also operates in many other related amyloidogenic proteins.
引用
收藏
页码:967 / 978
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Effect of molecular clips and tweezers on enzymatic reactions by binding coenzymes and basic amino acids
    Klaerner, Frank-Gerrit
    Schrader, Thomas
    Polkowska, Jolanta
    Bastkowski, Frank
    Talbiersky, Peter
    Kuchenbrandt, Mireia Campana
    Schaller, Torsten
    de Groot, Herbert
    Kirsch, Michael
    PURE AND APPLIED CHEMISTRY, 2010, 82 (04) : 991 - 999
  • [22] Host-Guest Interactions between Molecular Clips and Multistate Systems Based on Flavylium Salts
    Gomes, Raquel
    Parola, A. Jorge
    Bastkowski, Frank
    Polkowska, Jolanta
    Klaerner, Frank-Gerrit
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2009, 131 (25) : 8922 - 8938
  • [23] Chemical Basis of Interactions Between Engineered Nanoparticles and Biological Systems
    Mu, Qingxin
    Jiang, Guibin
    Chen, Lingxin
    Zhou, Hongyu
    Fourches, Denis
    Tropsha, Alexander
    Yan, Bing
    CHEMICAL REVIEWS, 2014, 114 (15) : 7740 - 7781
  • [24] Optical tweezers as tools for studying molecular interactions at surfaces
    Zahn, M
    Kurzbuch, D
    Pampaloni, F
    Seeger, S
    OPTICAL DIAGNOSTICS AND LIVING CELLS II, PROCEEDINGS OF, 1999, 3604 : 90 - 99
  • [25] Enhancing the interactions between neutral molecular tweezers and anions
    Hermida-Ramon, Jose M.
    Mandado, Marcos
    Sanchez-Lozano, Marta
    Estevez, Carlos M.
    PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS, 2010, 12 (01) : 164 - 169
  • [26] Characterization of Langmuir-monolayers of molecular tweezers and clips by means of Brewster-Angle-microscopy
    Rehage, H
    Achenbach, B
    Klärner, FG
    Kamieth, M
    Panitzky, J
    TENSIDE SURFACTANTS DETERGENTS, 2004, 41 (03) : 121 - 125
  • [27] Gemini-like Molecular Clips and Tweezers: The Influence of Structure and Guest Binding on Interfacial Tension
    Degen, P.
    Leick, S.
    Rehage, H.
    Polkowska, J.
    Klaerner, F-G.
    LANGMUIR, 2009, 25 (11) : 6094 - 6099
  • [28] Molecular-Level Interactions in Soils and Sediments: The Role of Aromatic π-Systems
    Keiluweit, Marco
    Kleber, Markus
    ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, 2009, 43 (10) : 3421 - 3429
  • [29] Molecular interactions of complex biological systems in rare and orphan diseases
    Nguyen, Kenny
    Tian, Lifeng
    Li, Dong
    March, Michael
    Pellegrino, Renata
    Kao, Charlly
    Sleiman, Patrick
    Hakonarson, Hakon
    ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2016, 252
  • [30] Multispectral optical tweezers for molecular diagnostics of single biological cells
    Butler, Corey
    Fardad, Shima
    Sincore, Alex
    Vangheluwe, Marie
    Baudelet, Matthieu
    Richardson, Martin
    IMAGING, MANIPULATION, AND ANALYSIS OF BIOMOLECULES, CELLS, AND TISSUES X, 2012, 8225