Thermodynamic Analysis of Receptors Based on Guanidinium/Boronic Acid Groups for the Complexation of Carboxylates, α‐Hydroxycarboxylates, and Diols: Driving Force for Binding and Cooperativity
- 22 July 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Chemistry – A European Journal
- Vol. 10 (15) , 3792-3804
- https://doi.org/10.1002/chem.200305737
Abstract
The thermodynamics of guanidinium and boronic acid interactions with carboxylates, α-hydroxycarboxylates, and diols were studied by determination of the binding constants of a variety of different guests to four different hosts (7–10). Each host contains a different combination of guanidinium groups and boronic acids. The guests included molecules with carboxylate and/or diol moieties, such as citrate, tartrate, and fructose, among others. The Gibbs free energies of binding were determined by UV/Vis absorption spectroscopy, by use of indicator displacement assays. The receptor based on three guanidinium groups (7) was selective for the tricarboxylate guest. The receptors that incorporated boronic acids (8–10) had higher affinities for guests that included α-hydroxycarboxylate and catechol moieties over guests containing only carboxylates or alkanediols. Isothermal titration calorimetry revealed the enthalpic and entropic contributions to the Gibbs free energies of binding. The binding of citrate and tartrate was investigated with hosts 7–10, for which all the binding events were exothermic, with positive entropy. Because of the selectivity of hosts 8–10, a simple boronic acid (14) was also investigated and determined to be selective for α-hydroxycarboxylates and catechols over amino acids and alkanediols. Further, the cooperativity of 8 and 9 in binding tartrate was also investigated, revealing little or no cooperativity with 8, but negative cooperativity with 9. A linear entropy/enthalpy compensation relationship for all the hosts 7–10, 14, and the carboxylate-/diol-containing guests was also obtained. This relationship indicates that increasing enthalpy of binding is offset by similar losses in entropy for molecular recognition involving guanidinium and boronic acid groups.Keywords
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