The interaction of the lipophilic cyclophane 1 with several acetylcholine (ACh) and tetramethylammonium (TMA) salts has been investigated in deuterochloroform to ascertain the influence of the counterion on the cation-pi interaction. Reliable association constants have been measured for 17 salts of commonly used anions; corresponding binding free energies -Delta G° ranged from over 8 kJ mol-1 down to the limit of detection. The dramatic dependence of the binding energy on the anion showed that the latter takes part in the process with a passive and adverse contribution, which inhibits cation binding even to complete suppression in unfavorable cases. Thermodynamic parameters for the association of 1 with TMA picrate demonstrate that binding is enthalpic in origin, showing a substantial enthalpy gain (Delta H° = -16.7 kJ mol-1) and an adverse entropic contribution (Delta S° = -27.9 J mol-1 K-1). A correlation has been found between the “goodness” of anions as binding partners and the solubility of their salts. Conversion of the anion into a more charge-dispersed species, e.g. conversion of chloride into dialkyltrichlorostannate, improves cation binding substantially, indicating that charge dispersion is a main factor determining the influence of the anion on the cation-pi interaction. DFT computational studies show that the variation of the binding free energy of TMA with the counterion is closely accounted for by the electrostatic potential (EP) of the ion-pair: guest binding appears to respond to the cation’s charge density exposed to the receptor, which is determined by the anion’s charge density through a polarization mechanism. A value of –Delta G° = 38.6 kJ mol-1 has been extrapolated for the free energy of binding of TMA to 1 in chloroform but in the absence of a counterion. The transmission of electrostatic effects from the ion-pair to the cation-pi interaction demonstrate that host-guest association is governed by coulombic attraction, as long as factors (steric, entropic, solvation, etc.) other than pure electrostatics are not prevalent.

Binding of Acetylcholine and Tetramethylammonium to a Cyclophane Receptor: Anion?s Contribution to the Cation-pi Interaction

Roelens S
2002

Abstract

The interaction of the lipophilic cyclophane 1 with several acetylcholine (ACh) and tetramethylammonium (TMA) salts has been investigated in deuterochloroform to ascertain the influence of the counterion on the cation-pi interaction. Reliable association constants have been measured for 17 salts of commonly used anions; corresponding binding free energies -Delta G° ranged from over 8 kJ mol-1 down to the limit of detection. The dramatic dependence of the binding energy on the anion showed that the latter takes part in the process with a passive and adverse contribution, which inhibits cation binding even to complete suppression in unfavorable cases. Thermodynamic parameters for the association of 1 with TMA picrate demonstrate that binding is enthalpic in origin, showing a substantial enthalpy gain (Delta H° = -16.7 kJ mol-1) and an adverse entropic contribution (Delta S° = -27.9 J mol-1 K-1). A correlation has been found between the “goodness” of anions as binding partners and the solubility of their salts. Conversion of the anion into a more charge-dispersed species, e.g. conversion of chloride into dialkyltrichlorostannate, improves cation binding substantially, indicating that charge dispersion is a main factor determining the influence of the anion on the cation-pi interaction. DFT computational studies show that the variation of the binding free energy of TMA with the counterion is closely accounted for by the electrostatic potential (EP) of the ion-pair: guest binding appears to respond to the cation’s charge density exposed to the receptor, which is determined by the anion’s charge density through a polarization mechanism. A value of –Delta G° = 38.6 kJ mol-1 has been extrapolated for the free energy of binding of TMA to 1 in chloroform but in the absence of a counterion. The transmission of electrostatic effects from the ion-pair to the cation-pi interaction demonstrate that host-guest association is governed by coulombic attraction, as long as factors (steric, entropic, solvation, etc.) other than pure electrostatics are not prevalent.
2002
Istituto di Chimica dei Composti OrganoMetallici - ICCOM -
124
8307
8315
Molecular Recognitio
Acetylcholine
Supramolecular
Binding
Host-Guest
Articolo su lavoro di ricerca di interesse generale per un pubblico di ricercatori di area interdisciplinare (Chimica Supramolecolare), pubblicato su rivista di maggior prestigio dell' American Chemical Society ad elevato fattore d'impatto (IF: 6.201; fonte: ISI 2002)
1
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
262
Bartoli S. ; Roelens S.
01 Contributo su Rivista::01.01 Articolo in rivista
none
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/167044
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