Controlling aromatic helix dimerization in water by tuning charge repulsions

Several helically folded aromatic oligoamides were designed and synthesized. The sequences were all water-soluble thanks to the charged side chains borne by the monomers. Replacing a few, sometimes only two, charged side chains by neutral methoxy groups was shown to trigger the formation of various...

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Veröffentlicht in:Chemical science (Cambridge) 2023-10, Vol.14 (4), p.11251-1126
Hauptverfasser: Teng, Binhao, Mandal, Pradeep K, Allmendinger, Lars, Douat, Céline, Ferrand, Yann, Huc, Ivan
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container_end_page 1126
container_issue 4
container_start_page 11251
container_title Chemical science (Cambridge)
container_volume 14
creator Teng, Binhao
Mandal, Pradeep K
Allmendinger, Lars
Douat, Céline
Ferrand, Yann
Huc, Ivan
description Several helically folded aromatic oligoamides were designed and synthesized. The sequences were all water-soluble thanks to the charged side chains borne by the monomers. Replacing a few, sometimes only two, charged side chains by neutral methoxy groups was shown to trigger the formation of various aggregates which could be tentatively assigned to head-to-head stacked dimers of single helices, double helical duplexes and a quadruplex, none of which would form in organic solvent with organic-soluble analogues. The nature of the aggregates was supported by concentration and solvent dependent NMR studies, 1 H DOSY experiments, mass spectrometry, and X-ray crystallography or energy-minimized models, as well as analogies with earlier studies. The hydrophobic effect appears to be the main driving force for aggregation but it can be finely modulated by the presence or absence of a small number of charges to an extent that had no precedent in aromatic foldamer architectures. These results will serve as a benchmark for future foldamer design in water. Aggregation of helical aromatic foldamers in water generates species not observed in organic solvents. The outcome of aggregation much depends on electrostatic repulsions mediated by the charges borne by the side chains.
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subjects Aggregates
Chemical Sciences
Chemistry
Cristallography
Crystallography
Dimerization
Helices
Mass spectrometry
NMR
Nuclear magnetic resonance
Organic chemistry
Solvents
title Controlling aromatic helix dimerization in water by tuning charge repulsions
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