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Binding studies on a library of induced-fit synthetic carbohydrate receptors with mannoside selectivity
Palanichamy, K., Bravo, M. F., Shlain, M. A., Schiro, F., Naeem, Y., Marianski, M., & Braunschweig, A. B. (2018). Binding studies on a library of induced-fit synthetic carbohydrate receptors with mannoside selectivity. Chemistry-A European Journal, 24(52), 13971-13982. https://doi.org/10.1002/chem.201803317
Synthetic carbohydrate receptors could serve as agents for disease detection, drug delivery, or even therapeutics, however, they are rarely used for these applications because they bind weakly and with a preference towards the all-equatorial glucosides that are not prevalent on the cell surface. Herein the binding of 8 receptors with 5 distinct octyloxy pyranosides, which was measured by mass spectrometry and by (HNMR)-H-1 titrations in CD2Cl2 at 298K, is reported, providing binding affinities that vary from approximate to 10(1)-10(4)m(-1). Although the receptors are promiscuous, 1 shows selectivity for -Man at a ratio of 103:1 -Man:-Gal, receptors 2-4 and 6 have preference for -Man, 5 is selective for -Gal, and 10 prefers -Glc (Man=mannose; Gal=galactose, Glc=glucose). A variety of 1D and 2D NMR, and computational techniques were used to determine the thermodynamic binding parameters (H-o and S-o) and the structure of the host-guest complex, revealing that dimeric receptor 10 binds -Man with increased enthalpy, but a larger entropic penalty than 1. The first-principles modelling suggests that 10-Man forms an inclusion-type complex where the glycan engages both monomeric subunits of 10 through H-bonding and C-H interactions. Like natural glycan-binding proteins, these receptors bind pyranosides by accessing multivalent and cooperative interactions, and these studies suggest a new approach towards biomimetic synthetic carbohydrate receptors, where conformational flexibility and promiscuity are incorporated into design.
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