Institut für Organische Chemie
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The chirality of the interlocked bay-arylated perylene motif is investigated upon its material prospect and the enhancement of its chiroptical response to the NIR spectral region. A considerable molecular library of inherently chiral perylene bisimides (PBIs) was utilized as acceptors in organic solar cells to provide decent device performances and insights into the structure-property relationship of PBI materials within a polymer blend. For the first time in the family of core-twisted PBIs, the effects of enantiopurity on the device performance was thoroughly investigated. The extraordinary structural sensitivity of CD spectroscopy served as crucial analytical tool to bridge the highly challenging gap between molecular properties and device analytics by proving the excitonic chirality of a helical PBI dimer. The chirality of this perylene motif could be further enhanced on a molecular level by both the expansion and the enhanced twisting of the π-scaffold to achieve a desirable strong chiroptical NIR response introducing a new family of twisted QBI-based nanoribbons. These achievements could be substantially further developed by expanding this molecular concept to a supramolecular level. The geometrically demanding supramolecular arrangement necessary for the efficient excitonic coupling was carefully encoded into the molecular design. Accordingly, the QBIs could form the first J-type aggregate constituting a fourfold-stranded superhelix of a rylene bisimide with strong excitonic chirality. Therefore, this thesis has highlighted the mutual corroboration of experimental and theoretical data from the molecular to the supramolecular level. It has demonstrated that for rylene bisimide dyes, the excitonic contribution to the overall chiroptical response can be designed and rationalized. This can help to pave the way for new organic functional materials to be used for
chiral sensing or chiral organic light-emitting devices.
Inspired by the proficiency of natural enzymes, mimicking of nanoenvironments for precise substrate preorganisation is a promising strategy in catalyst design. However, artificial examples of enzyme-like activation of H\(_2\)O molecules for the challenging oxidative water splitting reaction are hardly explored. Here, we introduce a mononuclear Ru(bda) complex (M1, bda: 2,2’-bipyridine-6,6’-dicarboxylate) equipped with a bipyridine-functionalized ligand to preorganize H\(_2\)O molecules in front of the metal center as in enzymatic clefts. The confined pocket of M1 accelerates chemically driven water oxidation at pH 1 by facilitating a water nucleophilic attack pathway with a remarkable turnover frequency of 140 s\(^{−1}\) that is comparable to the oxygen-evolving complex of photosystem II. Single crystal X-ray analysis of M1 under catalytic conditions allowed the observation of a 7th H\(_2\)O ligand directly coordinated to a RuIII center. Via a well-defined hydrogen-bonding network, another H\(_2\)O substrate is preorganized for the crucial O–O bond formation via nucleophilic attack.
A new perylene bisimide (PBI), with a fluorescence quantum yield up to unity, self‐assembles into two polymorphic supramolecular polymers. This PBI bears four solubilizing acyloxy substituents at the bay positions and is unsubstituted at the imide position, thereby allowing hydrogen‐bond‐directed self‐assembly in nonpolar solvents. The formation of the polymorphs is controlled by the cooling rate of hot monomer solutions. They show distinctive absorption profiles and morphologies and can be isolated in different polymorphic liquid‐crystalline states. The interchromophoric arrangement causing the spectral features was elucidated, revealing the formation of columnar and lamellar phases, which are formed by either homo‐ or heterochiral self‐assembly, respectively, of the atropoenantiomeric PBIs. Kinetic studies reveal a narcissistic self‐sorting process upon fast cooling, and that the transformation into the heterochiral (racemic) sheetlike self‐assemblies proceeds by dissociation via the monomeric state.
The self-assembly of a bowl-shaped naphthalimide-annulated corannulene of high solubility has been studied in a variety of solvents by NMR and UV/Vis spectroscopy. Evaluation by the anti-cooperative K\(_2\)-K model revealed the formation of supramolecular dimers of outstanding thermodynamic stability. Further structural proof for the almost exclusive formation of dimers over extended aggregates is demonstrated by atomic force microscopy (AFM) and diffusion ordered spectroscopy (DOSY) measurements as well as by theoretical calculations. Thus, herein we present the first report of a supramolecular dimer of an annulated corannulene derivative in solution and discuss its extraordinarily high thermodynamic stability with association constants up to > 10\(^6\)M\(^-\) \(^1\) in methylcyclohexane, which is comparable to the association constants given for planar phthalocyanine and perylene bisimide dyes.
Self-organization and self-sorting processes are responsible for the regulation and control of the vast majority of biological processes that eventually sustain life on our planet. Attempts to unveil the complexity of these systems have been devoted to the investigation of the binding processes between artificial molecules, complexes or aggregates within multicomponent mixtures, which has facilitated the emergence of the field of self-sorting in the last decade. Since, artificial systems involving discrete supramolecular structures, extended supramolecular aggregates or gel-phase materials in organic solvents or—to a lesser extent—in water have been investigated. In this review, we have collected diverse strategies employed in recent years to construct extended supramolecular aggregates in water upon self-sorting of small synthetic molecules. We have made particular emphasis on co-assembly processes in binary mixtures leading to supramolecular structures of remarkable complexity and the influence of different external variables such as solvent and concentration to direct recognition or discrimination processes between these species. The comprehension of such recognition phenomena will be crucial for the organization and evolution of complex matter.
The main focus of this thesis was the synthesis and analysis of multifunctional oligopeptides. The study of their non-covalent interactions with various counterparts revealed interesting new results, leading to both methodological and application related progress. The first project of this thesis concentrated on the in-depth analysis of the peptide receptor CBS-Lys-Lys-Phe-NH2 to acquire a better understanding of its binding mode upon complexation with a substrate. In this context it was possible to develop—in cooperation with the group of Prof. Sebastian Schlücker—a direct and label free spectroscopic detection of immobilized compounds which are often found in combinatorial libraries. This new screening method utilizes the advantages of the surface enhanced Raman spectroscopy and allowed for the first time a surface mapping of a single polystyrene bead for the identification of peptides in femtomolar concentrations. Hence, this method allows a very fast and sensitive detection of resin bound compounds. The development of this promising new approach set the starting point for future experiments to enable on-bead library screenings and to investigate the complex formation of immobilized compounds. After the comprehensive analysis of the basic structural features of small peptide receptors in the first part of this thesis, the second big block focused on its in vitro evaluation using biological relevant targets. Therefore, several different modifications of the initial peptide structures were synthesized. These modifications provided a molecular toolkit for the tailor made synthesis of structures individually designed for the respective target. The first tests addressed the interaction with Alzheimer’s related amyloid fibrils. During these experiments, the successful SPPS syntheses of tri- and tetravalent systems were achieved. The comparison of the multivalent form with the corresponding monovalent version was then under special investigations. These concentrated mainly on the interaction with various bacteria strains, as well as with different parasites. To localize the compounds within the organisms, the synthesis of fluorescence labelled versions was achieved. In addition, several compounds were tested by the Institute for Molecular Infection Biology of the University of Würzburg for their antibacterial activity. This thorough evaluation of the biological activity generated precious information about the influence of small structural changes in the peptide receptors. Especially the distinct influence of the multivalency effect and the acquired synthetic skills led to the development of an advanced non-covalent recognition event, as described in the final project of this thesis. The last part of this thesis discussed the development of a novel inhibitor for the serine protease beta-tryptase based on a tailor-made surface recognition event. It was possible to study and analyze the complex interaction with the unique structure of tryptase, that features a tetrameric frame and four catalytic cleavage sites buried deep inside of the hollow structure. However, the point of attack were not the four binding pockets, as mostly described in the literature, but rather the acidic areas around the cleavage sites and at the two circular openings. These should attract peptides with basic residues, which then can block the accessibility to the active sites. A combinatorial library of 216 tetravalent peptide compounds was synthesized to find the best structural composition for the non-covalent inhibition of beta-tryptase. For the screening of the library a new on-bead assay was applied. With this method a simultaneous readout of the total inhibition of all library members was possible, thus allowing a fast and direct investigation of the still resin bound inhibitors. Several additional experiments in solution unveiled the kinetics of the inhibition process. In conclusion, both mono- and multivalent inhibitors interact in a non-destructive and reversible way with the tryptase.
Ziel der Dissertation „Neue zwitterionische Halbschalen als Bausteine für supramolekulare Kapseln“ war die Verknüpfung zweier Guanidiniocarbonylpyrrolcarboxylat-Bindungsmotive von Schmuck über starre, sowohl aromatische als auch nichtaromatische Linker. Die so erhaltenen zwitterionische Halbschalen sollten in Lösung zu supramolekulare Kapseln aggregieren, welche einen Hohlraum ausweisen, in den Gastmoleküle eingelagert werden können. Dieses Bindungsmotiv ist selbstkomplementär und daher in der Lage Homodimere auszubilden. Durch die Kombination aus Wasserstoffbrücken und Ionenbindungen sind diese selbst in polaren Lösemitteln wie DMSO oder Wasser stabil, im Gegensatz zu Systemen, welche z.B. nur über Wasserstoffbrücken verfügen und in polaren Medien wieder dissoziieren. Zur Synthese wurden zwei Bindungsmotive mittels Tetrahydroxybenzol verbrückt. Die eindeutige Charakterisierung erfolgte über NMR-Spektroskopie, Massen-Spektrometrie und Röntgenstrukturanalyse. Anschließend wurde die Verbindung in die zwitterionische Form überführt und auf Kapselbildung hin untersucht (NMR, DOSY, Masse, Molecular Modelling). Die theoretischen Berechnungen wiesen darauf hin, dass die synthetisierten Halbschalen in der Lage sein sollten, Kapseln zu bilden. Trotz der erfolgreichen Synthese dieses neuartigen zwitterionischen Makrozyklus steht der experimentelle Nachweise auf Grund der schlechten Löslichkeit der Zwitterionen in allen verwendeten Lösemitteln noch aus. Auch wurde Glucoluril als nichtaromatisches Linkermolekül erfolgreich verwendet. Als erstes wurde das 4,4’-Diphenylglucoluril erfolgreich in der Kupplung eingesetzt. Es war möglich, die so erhaltenen cis/trans-Makrozyklen säulenchromatographisch zu isolieren und mittels Röntgenstrukturanalyse zu charakterisieren. Nach Überführung in die Zwitterionen wurden diese wiederum auf die Kapselbildung hin untersucht (NMR, DOSY, Masse, Molecular Modelling). Berechnungen zufolge sollte die Kapselbildung möglich sein, jedoch steht auch hier trotz erfolgreicher Synthese der experimentelle Nachweis auf Grund der Unlöslichkeit noch aus. Zur Verbesserung der Löslichkeit wurden zwei neue Glucolurilderivate entwickelt, welche am Phenylring mit Octyl- bzw. Triethylenglykolketten substituiert waren. Dadurch sollte die Löslichkeit der Zwitterionen in organischen bzw. wässrigen Lösungen erhöht werden. Jedoch zeigte die Einführung dieser Ketten keine wesentliche Verbesserung der Löslichkeit und somit konnte auch bei diesen neuen zwitterionischen Halbschalen keine Kapselbildung nachgewiesen werden. Im Rahmen dieser Dissertation wurden sieben neue zwitterionische makrozyklische Halbschalen synthetisiert und die daraus gewonnenen Erkenntnisse können als Ausgangspunkt verwendet werden, die Löslichkeit weiter zu verbessern.
The subject of this thesis is the synthesis and characterization of PBI-based fluorescent metallosupramolecular polymers and cyclic arrays. Terpyridine receptor functionalized PBIs of predesigned geometry have been used as building blocks to construct desired macromolecular structures through metal-ion-directed self-assembly. These metallosupramolecular architectures have been investigated by NMR, UV/Vis and fluorescence spectroscopy, mass spectrometry, and atomic force microscopy.
Neue künstliche Guanidiniocarbonylpyrrol-Rezeptoren zur Komplexierung von Oxo-Anionen in Wasser
(2008)
Ziel der Dissertation „Neue künstliche Guanidiniocarbonylpyrrol-Rezeptoren zur Komplexierung von Oxo-Anionen in Wasser“ war die Weiterentwicklung dieser Rezeptoren nach Schmuck für die Komplexierung insbesondere von Carboxylaten, um sie hinsichtlich Bindungsaffinität und Substratspezifität zu optimieren. Dazu wurde zunächst die Synthese zweier wichtiger Grundbausteine in einzelnen Schritten vollständig überarbeitet, wobei veränderte Reaktionsbedingungen und Aufarbeitungsschritte zu gesteigerten Ausbeuten führten. Dadurch ist es nun möglich, diese Bausteine effizienter zu synthetisieren und im Multigramm-Maßstab für die Darstellung von Rezeptoren zur Oxo-Anionen-Erkennung einzusetzen. Weiterhin wurde die Verbesserung der Komplexierungseigenschaften gegenüber Carboxylaten auf zwei Arten untersucht: zum einen durch das Anbringen eines zusätzlichen Seitenarms an der Guanidinio-Einheit zur Bildung von Guanidiniocarbonylpyrrol-Tweezer-Rezeptoren, zum anderen durch das Einführen einer zweiten positiven Ladung neben der Carboxylat-Bindungsstelle (CBS) zur Darstellung biskationischer Guanidiniocarbonylpyrrol-Rezeptoren. Zur Darstellung von Tweezer-Rezeptoren wurde ein zusätzlicher Seitenarm an der N’-Position der Guanidinio-Einheit angebracht. Die beiden Arme sollten ein Substrat pinzettenartig von zwei Seiten, mit der CBS als Kopfgruppe, komplexieren können. Durch zusätzliche Wechselwirkungen des neuen Seitenarms sollte neben einer stärkeren Komplexierung vor allem eine höhere Substratspezifität erzielt werden. Die experimentell ermittelten Bindungskonstanten lagen allerdings im Bereich der N’-unsubstituierten Rezeptoren. Somit stellen die Tweezer-Modifikationen daher keine Verbesserung der Guanidiniocarbonylpyrrol-Rezeptoren dar. In einem weiteren Projekt zur Rezeptor-Optimierung wurden, durch Einführung einer zweiten positiven Ladung in Form einer terminalen Ammonium-Gruppe, biskationische Guanidiniocarbonylpyrrol-Rezeptoren erfolgreich synthetisiert. Die Komplexierungseigenschaften dieser biskationischen Rezeptoren wurden in Bindungsstudien vornehmlich mit Aminosäurecarboxylaten mittels UV- und Fluoreszenz-Spektroskopie, Massenspektrometrie, NMR-Spektroskopie, ITC und Molecular Modeling Berechnungen untersucht. Anhand der Substratspezifität der biskationischen Rezeptoren wurde deutlich, dass die Spacerlänge, an der die zusätzliche positive Ladung angebracht ist, eine entscheidende Rolle bei der Komplexierung spielte. Galten eigentlich starre, präorganisierte, kurze Linker als vorteilhaft hinsichtlich der Entropie, so ist hier zu erkennen, dass längere, flexiblere Linker zu einer besseren Komplexierung führen können, wenn geeignete zusätzliche nichtkovalente Wechselwirkungen möglich sind. Die biskationischen Rezeptoren stellen damit eine Optimierung des Carboxylat-Bindungsmotivs der Guanidiniocarbonylpyrrol-Rezeptoren nach Schmuck in der Anionen-Erkennung dar.
The effective binding of anions like carboxylates and phosphates in aqueous solutions is of particular interest for various reasons. The natural archetypes of effective anion receptors are enzymes that contain often arginine as relevant amino acid in the binding pocket. For this reason, one class of artificial anion receptors that emerged more than two decades ago mimics the anion binding with the guanidinium group present in the amino acid side chain. In 1999, Schmuck and coworkers developed a new class of guanidinium-based oxo anion receptor that binds carboxylates even in aqueous media. The binding modes of the 2-(guanidiniocarbonyl)-1H-pyrroles are based on individually weak non-covalent interaction between artificial host and substrate like ion pairing and multiple hydrogen bonds. The zwitterionic derivative with substitution of a carboxylate group in position 5 of the pyrrole ring system shows a strong self-assembly to discrete dimers (dimer 1) with an estimated association constant of 170 M-1 even in water. In order to further improve the structure motif for an effective oxo anion binding it is therefore of great interest to quantify the different intermolecular interactions between two monomeric units of 1. Against this background several theoretical ab initio studies were conducted in order to elucidate the influences of intrinsic properties as well as solvent effects on the stability of self-assembled dimers. In chapter 4.1 the molecular interactions in dimer 1 were investigated by comparison to various “knock-out” analogues. In these analogues single hydrogen bonds were switched off by substitution of hydrogen donor atoms with either methylene groups or ether bridges. The calculations were done for vacuum and solvation, as represented by a conductor-like polarizable continuum. It could be shown that the application of a simple continuum solvent model fails to predict the absolute energies of the knock-out analogues in strongly polar solvents. However, the calculated trends can explain the relative stabilities. In chapter 4.2 the structural similarity of arginine with structure 1 was used in order to examine the dependence of self-assembly from the flexibility of the molecular structure. In chapter 4.2.1 new global minimum structures of the canonical and zwitterionic arginine in gas phase were found by means of exhaustive force field based conformational searches in conjunction with ab initio structure optimizations of the lowest energy conformers. Most of the newly identified minimum conformers of both the zwitterionic and canonical tautomer revealed geometrical arrangements with hitherto unreported stacked orientations of the terminal groups. Finally a novel global minimum structure was detected that is more than 8 kJ mol-1 lower in energy than the previously published conformers. The same strategy for finding minimum energy conformers of the arginine monomer has also been employed for the arginine dimer structures. While previous theoretical studies favoured directed hydrogen bonds the new global minimum structure MMFF1 is about 60 kJ mol-1 more stable and exhibits a stacked orientation of the guanidinium and carboxylate groups. The importance of rigidity on the dimer stability was proven by calculations of an artificially stiffened arginine dimer system. The high binding affinity dimer 1 results by about 50% from the rigidity of the monomers which prevents any intramolecular stabilization. In chapter 4.3 novel structure motifs with varying ring systems have been examined on a DFT level of theory in order to make proposals for an improved carboxylate binding motif. The direct dependency of the dimerization energy on an increasing dipole moment was demonstrated by various anellated ring structures. The influence of the delocalization in the monomer on the dimerization energy was examined by variation of the electronic structure of electronically decoupled biphenylenes. With the aid of various substituted 7-guanidinioindole-2-carboxylate derivatives we could show that the carbonyl function is mainly responsible for the advantageous preorganisation, whereas the effect on the acidity seems to be only of minor importance. In the last chapter cooperativity effects in supramolecular assemblies have been investigated. This was achieved by NMR shift calculations of adenosine-carboxylic acid complexes as model systems and comparison to experimental low-temperature NMR studies. We could demonstrate that only by applying vibrational averaged NMR shifts the experimental proton shifts obtained at very low temperatures in the hydrogen bond exchange regime could be reproduced.