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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Organocatalysts Fold to Generate an Active Site Pocket for the Mannich Reaction
ÁDám MadarászAntti J. NeuvonenTamás FöldesPetri M. PihkoImre Pápaisubject
inorganic chemicalsorganocatalysis bifunctional cooperativity mechanism kinetics computationsTertiary aminecooperativityIminemechanism010402 general chemistry01 natural sciencesCatalysischemistry.chemical_compoundHammett equationMannich reactionOrganic chemistryorganocatalysista116Mannich reactionbiology010405 organic chemistryChemistryFoldamerActive siteGeneral ChemistryCombinatorial chemistrycomputations0104 chemical sciencesbifunctionalMalonatekineticsOrganocatalysisbiology.proteindescription
Catalysts containing urea, thiourea and tertiary amine groups fold into a three-dimensional organized structure in solution both in the absence as well as in the presence of substrates or substrate analogues, as indicated by solution NMR and computational studies. These foldamer catalysts promote Mannich reactions with both aliphatic and aromatic imines and malonate esters. Hammett plot and secondary kinetic isotope effects provide evidence for the C-C bond forming event as the turnoverlimiting step of the Mannich reaction. Computational studies suggest two viable pathways for the C-C bond formation step, differing in the activation modes of the malonate and imine substrates. The results show that the foldamer catalysts may promote C-C bond formation with an aliphatic substrate bearing a cyclohexyl group by enhanced binding of the substrates by dispersion interactions, but these interactions are largely absent with a simpler catalyst. Additional control experiments demonstrate the ability of simple thiourea catalysts to promote competing side reactions with aliphatic substrates, such as reversible covalent binding of the thiourea sulfur to the imine which deactivates the catalyst, and imine-to-enamine isomerization reactions. In foldamer catalysts, the nucleophilicity of sulfur is reduced, which prevents catalyst deactivation. The results indicate that the improved catalytic performance of foldamer catalysts in Mannich reactions may not be due to cooperative effects of intramolecular hydrogen bonds, but simply due to the presence of the folded structure that provides an active site pocket, accommodating the substrate and at the same time impeding undesirable side reactions. peerReviewed
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2017-04-06 |