Coordination Cages Based on Bis(pyrazolylpyridine) Ligands: Structures, Dynamic Behavior, Guest Binding, and Catalysis

被引:212
作者
Ward, Michael D. [1 ]
Hunter, Christopher A. [2 ]
Williams, Nicholas H. [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Warwick, Dept Chem, Coventry CV4 7AL, W Midlands, England
[2] Univ Cambridge, Univ Chem Lab, Lensfield Rd, Cambridge CB2 1EW, England
[3] Univ Sheffield, Dept Chem, Sheffield S3 7HF, S Yorkshire, England
基金
英国工程与自然科学研究理事会;
关键词
HIGH-ENERGY WATER; MOLECULAR RECOGNITION; COMPLEXES; CHEMISTRY; CAVITY; MECHANISM; HELICATE; SOLVENT; SURFACE; ANIONS;
D O I
10.1021/acs.accounts.8b00261
中图分类号
O6 [化学];
学科分类号
0703 ;
摘要
CONSPECTUS: We describe here a family of coordination cages with interesting structural, guest-binding, and catalytic properties. Flexible bridging ligands containing two bidentate pyrazolylpyridine termini assemble with transition-metal dications to afford coordination cages containing a metal ion at each vertex, a bridging ligand spanning each edge, and a 2:3 metal:ligand ratio. This stoichiometry is expressed in structures ranging from M4L6 tetrahedra to M16L24 tetracapped truncated tetrahedra, which are stabilized by the formation of pi-stacked arrays between electron-rich and electron-poor ligand segments that form around the cage periphery. In some cases concentration- and/or temperature-dependent equilibria between multiple cage structures occur, arising from a balance between entropy, which favors the formation of a larger number of smaller assemblies, and enthalpy, which maximizes both interligand aromatic stacking and solvophobic effects in the larger assembles. The cages are hollow and can accommodate guests often anions or solvent molecules in the central cavity. For one cage family, M8L12 species with an approximately cubic structure and a ca. 400 angstrom(3) cavity, the guest binding properties have been studied extensively. This cage can accommodate a wide range of neutral organic guests, with binding in water being driven principally by the hydrophobic effect, which leads to binding constants of up to 10(8) W-1. The accumulation of a large amount of empirical data on guest binding in the M8L12 cage in water provided the basis for a predictive tool for in silico screening of potential guests using the molecular docking program GOLD; this methodology has allowed the identification of numerous new guests with accurately predicted binding constants and provides a transformative new approach to exploring the host/guest chemistry of cages. Binding of benzisoxazole inside the M8L12 cage results in substantial rate enhancements by a factor of up to 2 x 10(3) -of the Kemp elimination, in which benzisoxazole reacts to give 2-cyanophenolate. Catalysis arises because the 16+ cage cation accumulates anions around the surface by ion pairing, leading to a high effective concentration of hydroxide ions surrounding the guest even when the bulk pH is modest. Thus, the catalysis relies on the operation of two orthogonal interactions that bring the reaction partners together: hydrophobic guest binding in the cavity, which is lined with CH groups from the ligands, and ion pairing around the highly cationic cage surface. A consequence of this is that under some conditions the product of the cage catalyzed Kemp elimination (the 2-cyanophenolate anion) itself accumulates around the cage surface and deprotonates another benzisoxazole guest, perpetuating the reaction in an autocatalytic manner. Thus, different anions accumulating around the cage can act as partners for reaction with a cavity-bound guest, opening up the possibility that the M8L12 cage can act as a general catalyst for reactions of electrophilic guests with surface-bound anions.
引用
收藏
页码:2073 / 2082
页数:10
相关论文
共 38 条
[1]   Coordination chemistry of tetradentate N-donor ligands containing two pyrazolyl-pyridine units separated by a 1,8-naphthyl spacer: Dodecanuclear and tetranuclear coordination cages and cyclic helicates [J].
Argent, Stephen P. ;
Adams, Harry ;
Riis-Johannessen, Thomas ;
Jeffery, John C. ;
Harding, Lindsay P. ;
Mamula, Olimpia ;
Ward, Michael D. .
INORGANIC CHEMISTRY, 2006, 45 (10) :3905-3919
[2]   The Hydrophobic Effect Revisited-Studies with Supramolecular Complexes Imply High-Energy Water as a Noncovalent Driving Force [J].
Biedermann, Frank ;
Nau, Werner M. ;
Schneider, Hans-Joerg .
ANGEWANDTE CHEMIE-INTERNATIONAL EDITION, 2014, 53 (42) :11158-11171
[3]   Supramolecular Catalysis in Metal-Ligand Cluster Hosts [J].
Brown, Casey J. ;
Toste, F. Dean ;
Bergman, Robert G. ;
Raymond, Kenneth N. .
CHEMICAL REVIEWS, 2015, 115 (09) :3012-3035
[4]   ION BINDING AND REACTIVITY AT CHARGED AQUEOUS INTERFACES [J].
BUNTON, CA ;
NOME, F ;
QUINA, FH ;
ROMSTED, LS .
ACCOUNTS OF CHEMICAL RESEARCH, 1991, 24 (12) :357-364
[5]   MICELLAR EFFECTS UPON SUBSTITUTIONS BY NUCLEOPHILIC ANIONS [J].
BUNTON, CA ;
MOFFATT, JR .
JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY, 1988, 92 (10) :2896-2902
[6]   Kinetic medium effects on organic reactions in aqueous colloidal solutions [J].
Buurma, Niklaas J. .
ADVANCES IN PHYSICAL ORGANIC CHEMISTRY, VOL 43, 2009, 43 :1-37
[7]   PHYSICAL ORGANIC-CHEMISTRY OF BENZISOXAZOLES .1. MECHANISM OF BASE-CATALYZED DECOMPOSITION OF BENZISOXAZOLES [J].
CASEY, ML ;
KEMP, DS ;
PAUL, KG ;
COX, DD .
JOURNAL OF ORGANIC CHEMISTRY, 1973, 38 (13) :2294-2301
[8]   Recent Developments in the Preparation and Chemistry of Metallacycles and Metallacages via Coordination [J].
Cook, Timothy R. ;
Stang, Peter J. .
CHEMICAL REVIEWS, 2015, 115 (15) :7001-7045
[9]   Catalysis in a Cationic Coordination Cage Using a Cavity-Bound Guest and Surface-Bound Anions: Inhibition, Activation, and Autocatalysis [J].
Cullen, William ;
Metherell, Alexander J. ;
Wragg, Ashley B. ;
Taylor, Christopher G. P. ;
Williams, Nicholas H. ;
Ward, Michael D. .
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2018, 140 (08) :2821-2828
[10]  
Cullen W, 2016, NAT CHEM, V8, P231, DOI [10.1038/NCHEM.2452, 10.1038/nchem.2452]