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1.
RSC Med Chem ; 15(2): 485-491, 2024 Feb 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38389892

ABSTRACT

We report a new class of carboplatin-TFO hybrid that incorporates a bifunctional alkyne-amine nucleobase monomer called AP-C3-dT that enables dual 'click' platinum(ii) drug conjugation and thiazole orange fluorophore coupling. Thiazole orange enhances the binding of Pt(ii)-TFO hybrids and provides an intrinsic method for monitoring triplex formation. These hybrid constructs possess increased stabilisation and crosslinking properties in comparison to earlier Pt(ii)-TFOs, and demonstrate sequence-specific binding at neutral pH.

2.
Nat Commun ; 13(1): 4036, 2022 07 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35821218

ABSTRACT

Oligonucleotides that target mRNA have great promise as therapeutic agents for life-threatening conditions but suffer from poor bioavailability, hence high cost. As currently untreatable diseases come within the reach of oligonucleotide therapies, new analogues are urgently needed to address this. With this in mind we describe reduced-charge oligonucleotides containing artificial LNA-amide linkages with improved gymnotic cell uptake, RNA affinity, stability and potency. To construct such oligonucleotides, five LNA-amide monomers (A, T, C, 5mC and G), where the 3'-OH is replaced by an ethanoic acid group, are synthesised in good yield and used in solid-phase oligonucleotide synthesis to form amide linkages with high efficiency. The artificial backbone causes minimal structural deviation to the DNA:RNA duplex. These studies indicate that splice-switching oligonucleotides containing LNA-amide linkages and phosphorothioates display improved activity relative to oligonucleotides lacking amides, highlighting the therapeutic potential of this technology.


Subject(s)
Oligonucleotides, Antisense , Phosphorothioate Oligonucleotides , Amides , Exons , Oligonucleotides, Antisense/genetics , RNA/chemistry
3.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 61(3): e202110455, 2022 01 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34652881

ABSTRACT

Limitations of clinical platinum(II) therapeutics include systemic toxicity and inherent resistance. Modern approaches, therefore, seek new ways to deliver active platinum(II) to discrete nucleic acid targets. In the field of antigene therapy, triplex-forming oligonucleotides (TFOs) have attracted interest for their ability to specifically recognise extended duplex DNA targets. Here, we report a click chemistry based approach that combines alkyne-modified TFOs with azide-bearing cis-platinum(II) complexes-based on cisplatin, oxaliplatin, and carboplatin motifs-to generate a library of PtII -TFO hybrids. These constructs can be assembled modularly and enable directed platinum(II) crosslinking to purine nucleobases on the target sequence under the guidance of the TFO. By covalently incorporating modifications of thiazole orange-a known DNA-intercalating fluorophore-into PtII -TFOs constructs, enhanced target binding and discrimination between target and off-target sequences was achieved.


Subject(s)
Coordination Complexes/chemistry , DNA/chemistry , Oligonucleotides/chemistry , Platinum/chemistry , Alkynes/chemistry , Click Chemistry
4.
J Org Chem ; 86(9): 6305-6313, 2021 05 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33890775

ABSTRACT

13C kinetic isotope effects (KIEs) for the photoredox-promoted [2 + 2] cycloaddition of enones were determined in homocoupling and heterocoupling examples. The only significant KIEs were observed at the ß carbon, indicating that Cß-Cß bond formation is irreversible. However, these KIEs were much lower than computational predictions, suggesting that product selectivity is determined in part by a step prior to Cß-Cß bond formation. The results are explained as arising from a competition between C-C bond formation and electron exchange between substrate alkenes. This idea is supported by a relatively small substituent effect on substrate selectivity. The possible rates for electron transfer and bond-forming steps are analyzed, and the competition appears plausible, particularly if the mechanism involves a complex between reduced and neutral enone molecules.


Subject(s)
Alkenes , Isotopes , Cycloaddition Reaction , Electron Transport , Kinetics
5.
Org Lett ; 23(6): 2174-2177, 2021 Mar 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33650871

ABSTRACT

The initial energy in a reactive intermediate is derived from the transition state before the intermediate but can affect selectivity after the intermediate. In this way an observable selectivity can report on a prior, kinetically hidden mechanistic step. This new type of mechanistic probe is demonstrated here for the oxidation of 1-methylcyclobutanol by phthaloyl peroxide/Bu4N+Br-, and it supports a hypobromite chain mechanism in place of the previously proposed hydrogen atom transfer mechanism.

6.
J Am Chem Soc ; 142(47): 19885-19888, 2020 11 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33179917

ABSTRACT

Large intramolecular 13C kinetic isotope effects (KIEs) for the di-π-methane rearrangement of benzobarrelene fit with statistical expectations from heavy-atom tunneling when a low-energy sensitizer is employed, but much lower KIEs are observed with higher-energy sensitizers. These results in combination with trajectory studies suggest that the excess vibrational energy available from triplet energy transfer leads to hot and nonstatistical dynamics in the rearrangement.


Subject(s)
Methane/chemistry , Quantum Theory , Carbon Isotopes/chemistry , Energy Transfer , Temperature , Thermodynamics
7.
Chembiochem ; 21(24): 3563-3574, 2020 12 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32755000

ABSTRACT

In the field of nucleic acid therapy there is major interest in the development of libraries of DNA-reactive small molecules which are tethered to vectors that recognize and bind specific genes. This approach mimics enzymatic gene editors, such as ZFNs, TALENs and CRISPR-Cas, but overcomes the limitations imposed by the delivery of a large protein endonuclease which is required for DNA cleavage. Here, we introduce a chemistry-based DNA-cleavage system comprising an artificial metallo-nuclease (AMN) that oxidatively cuts DNA, and a triplex-forming oligonucleotide (TFO) that sequence-specifically recognises duplex DNA. The AMN-TFO hybrids coordinate CuII ions to form chimeric catalytic complexes that are programmable - based on the TFO sequence employed - to bind and cut specific DNA sequences. Use of the alkyne-azide cycloaddition click reaction allows scalable and high-throughput generation of hybrid libraries that can be tuned for specific reactivity and gene-of-interest knockout. As a first approach, we demonstrate targeted cleavage of purine-rich sequences, optimisation of the hybrid system to enhance stability, and discrimination between target and off-target sequences. Our results highlight the potential of this approach where the cutting unit, which mimics the endonuclease cleavage machinery, is directly bound to a TFO guide by click chemistry.


Subject(s)
Copper/metabolism , DNA/metabolism , Endonucleases/metabolism , Metalloproteins/metabolism , Oligonucleotides/metabolism , Click Chemistry , Copper/chemistry , DNA/chemistry , Metalloproteins/chemical synthesis , Metalloproteins/chemistry , Molecular Structure , Oligonucleotides/chemical synthesis , Oligonucleotides/chemistry
8.
J Am Chem Soc ; 142(29): 12865-12877, 2020 07 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32578428

ABSTRACT

Additions of acids to 1,3-dienes are conventionally understood as involving discrete intermediates that undergo an ordinary competition between subsequent pathways to form the observed products. The combined experimental, computational, and dynamic trajectory study here suggests that this view is incorrect, and that solvation dynamics plays a critical role in the mechanism. While implicit solvent models were inadequate, QM/QM' trajectories in explicit solvent provide an accurate prediction of the experimental selectivity in the addition of HCl to 1,3-pentadiene. Trajectories initiated from a protonation saddle point on the potential of mean force surface are predominantly unproductive due to a gating effect of solvation that allows diene protonation only when the incipient ion pair is neither too solvent-stabilized nor too little. Protonation then leads to relatively unsolvated ion pairs, and a majority of these collapse rapidly to the 1,2-product, without barrier and without achieving equilibrium solvation as intermediates. The remainder decay slowly, at a rate consistent with equilibrium solvation as true intermediates, affording a mixture of addition products. Overall, an accurate description of the nature and pathway selectivity of the ion pair intermediates in carbocation reactions must allow for species lacking equilibrium solvation. Potential reinterpretations of a series of historically notable observations in carbocation reactions are discussed.


Subject(s)
Alkadienes/chemistry , Hydrochloric Acid/chemistry , Thermodynamics , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Molecular Structure , Quantum Theory , Solvents/chemistry
9.
J Am Chem Soc ; 142(13): 5985-5990, 2020 04 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32155338

ABSTRACT

We present a simple strategy for the synthesis of main chain oligonucleotide rotaxanes with precise control over the position of the macrocycle. The novel DNA-based rotaxanes were analyzed to assess the effect of the mechanical bond on their properties.


Subject(s)
Copper/chemistry , DNA/chemical synthesis , Oligonucleotides/chemical synthesis , Rotaxanes/chemical synthesis , Alkynes/chemical synthesis , Alkynes/chemistry , Azides/chemical synthesis , Azides/chemistry , Click Chemistry , Cycloaddition Reaction , DNA/chemistry , Macrocyclic Compounds/chemical synthesis , Macrocyclic Compounds/chemistry , Oligonucleotides/chemistry , Rotaxanes/chemistry
10.
J Am Chem Soc ; 142(1): 85-88, 2020 01 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31852185

ABSTRACT

The carboborative ring contraction of cyclohexenes exhibits an abnormal selectivity pattern in which a formally concerted double migration gives rise to predominant but not exclusive inversion products. In dynamic trajectories, the inversion and retention products are formed from the same transition state, and the trajectories accurately account for the experimental product ratios. The unusual origin of the selectivity is the dynamically retained non-equivalence of newly formed versus pre-existing bonds after the first bond migration.


Subject(s)
Stereoisomerism , Molecular Conformation , Quantum Theory
11.
Org Biomol Chem ; 17(24): 5943-5950, 2019 06 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31157811

ABSTRACT

We have synthesised a range of thiazole orange (TO) functionalised oligonucleotides for nucleic acid detection in which TO is attached to the nucleobase or sugar of thymidine. The properties of duplexes between TO-probes and their DNA and RNA targets strongly depend on the length of the linker between TO and the oligonucleotide, the position of attachment of TO to the nucleotide (major or minor groove) and the mode of attachment of thiazole orange (via benzothiazole or quinoline moiety). This information can be used to design probes for detection of target nucleic acids by fluorescence or duplex melting. With cellular imaging in mind we show that 2'-OMe RNA probes with TO at the 5-position of uracil or the 2'-position of the ribose sugar are particularly effective, exhibiting up to 44-fold fluorescence enhancement against DNA and RNA, and high duplex stability. Excellent mismatch discrimination is achieved when the mispaired base is located adjacent to the TO-modified nucleotide rather than opposite to it. The simple design, ease of synthesis and favourable properties of these TO probes suggest applications in fluorescent imaging of DNA and RNA in a cellular context.


Subject(s)
Benzothiazoles/chemical synthesis , DNA/analysis , Fluorescence , Oligonucleotide Probes/chemical synthesis , Quinolines/chemical synthesis , RNA/analysis , Benzothiazoles/chemistry , Oligonucleotide Probes/chemistry , Quinolines/chemistry
12.
Science ; 364(6440)2019 05 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31073043

ABSTRACT

Díaz-Urrutia and Ott (Reports, 22 March 2019, p. 1326) report a selective conversion of methane to methanesulfonic acid that is proposed to occur by a cationic chain reaction in which CH3 + adds to sulfur trioxide (SO3) to form CH3-S(O)2O+ This mechanism is not plausible because of the solvent reactivity of CH3 +, the non-nucleophilicity of the sulfur atom of SO3, and the high energy of CH3-S(O)2O.

13.
Nat Chem ; 10(2): 237-241, 2018 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29359761

ABSTRACT

Any long-lived chemical structure in solution is subject to statistical energy equilibration, so the history of any specific structure does not affect its subsequent reactions. This is not true for very short-lived intermediates because energy equilibration takes time. Here, this idea is applied to achieve the 'energy labelling' of a reactive intermediate. The selectivity of the ring-opening α-cleavage reaction of the 1-methylcyclobutoxy radical is found here to vary broadly depending on how the radical was formed. Reactions that provide little excess energy to the intermediate lead to a high selectivity in the subsequent cleavage (measured as a kinetic isotope effect), whereas reactions that provide more excess energy to the intermediate exhibit a lower selectivity. Accounting for the expected excess energy allows the prediction of the observed product ratios and, in turn, the product ratios can be used to determine the energy present in an intermediate.


Subject(s)
Alcohols/chemistry , Thermodynamics , Energy Transfer , Kinetics , Molecular Structure , Solutions
14.
J Am Chem Soc ; 139(44): 15710-15723, 2017 11 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29029560

ABSTRACT

Our previous work found that canonical forms of transition state theory incorrectly predict the regioselectivity of the hydroboration of propene with BH3 in solution. In response, it has been suggested that alternative statistical and nonstatistical rate theories can adequately account for the selectivity. This paper uses a combination of experimental and theoretical studies to critically evaluate the ability of these rate theories, as well as dynamic trajectories and newly developed localized statistical models, to predict quantitative selectivities and qualitative trends in hydroborations on a broader scale. The hydroboration of a series of terminally substituted alkenes with BH3 was examined experimentally, and a classically unexpected trend is that the selectivity increases as the alkyl chain is lengthened far from the reactive centers. Conventional and variational transition state theories can predict neither the selectivities nor the trends. The canonical competitive nonstatistical model makes somewhat better predictions for some alkenes but fails to predict trends, and it performs poorly with an alkene chosen to test a specific prediction of the model. Added nonstatistical corrections to this model make the predictions worse. Parametrized Rice-Ramsperger-Kassel-Marcus (RRKM)-master equation calculations correctly predict the direction of the trend in selectivity versus alkene size but overpredict its magnitude, and the selectivity with large alkenes remains unpredictable with any parametrization. Trajectory studies in explicit solvent can predict selectivities without parametrization but are impractical for predicting small changes in selectivity. From a lifetime and energy analysis of the trajectories, "localized RRKM-ME" and "competitive localized noncanonical" rate models are suggested as steps toward a general model. These provide the best predictions of the experimental observations and insight into the selectivities.


Subject(s)
Alkenes/chemistry , Boron/chemistry , Models, Statistical , Models, Chemical , Solvents/chemistry
15.
J Org Chem ; 82(15): 8165-8178, 2017 08 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28671461

ABSTRACT

Several formal heteroborylative cyclization reactions have been recently reported, but little physical-organic and mechanistic data are known. We now investigate the catalyst-free formal thioboration reaction of alkynes to gain mechanistic insight into B-chlorocatecholborane (ClBcat) in its new role as an alkynophilic Lewis acid in electrophilic cyclization/dealkylation reactions. In kinetic studies, the reaction is second-order globally and first-order with respect to both the 2-alkynylthioanisole substrate and the ClBcat electrophile, with activation parameters of ΔG‡ = 27.1 ± 0.1 kcal mol-1 at 90 °C, ΔH‡ = 13.8 ± 1.0 kcal mol-1, and ΔS‡ = -37 ± 3 cal mol-1 K-1, measured over the range 70-90 °C. Carbon kinetic isotope effects supported a rate-determining AdE3 mechanism wherein alkyne activation by neutral ClBcat is concerted with cyclative attack by nucleophilic sulfur. A Hammett study found a ρ+ of -1.7, suggesting cationic charge buildup during the cyclization and supporting rate-determining concerted cyclization. Studies of the reaction with tris(pentafluorophenyl)borane (B(C6F5)3), an activating agent capable of cyclization but not dealkylation, resulted in the isolation of a postcyclization zwitterionic intermediate. Kinetic studies via UV-vis spectroscopy with this boron reagent found second-order kinetics, supporting the likely relevancy of intermediates in this system to the ClBcat system. Computational studies comparing ClBcat with BCl3 as an activating agent showed why BCl3, in contrast to ClBcat, failed to mediate the complete the cyclization/demethylation reaction sequence by itself. Overall, the results support a mechanism in which the ClBcat reagent serves a bifunctional role by sequentially activating the alkyne, despite being less electrophilic than other known alkyne-activating reagents and then providing chloride for post-rate-determining demethylation/neutralization of the resulting zwitterionic intermediate.


Subject(s)
Alkynes/chemistry , Borates/chemical synthesis , Sulfhydryl Compounds/chemical synthesis , Borates/chemistry , Cyclization , Kinetics , Models, Molecular , Molecular Structure , Quantum Theory , Sulfhydryl Compounds/chemistry , Thermodynamics
16.
Nat Struct Mol Biol ; 24(6): 544-552, 2017 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28504696

ABSTRACT

The mechanism by which the recently identified DNA modification 5-formylcytosine (fC) is recognized by epigenetic writer and reader proteins is not known. Recently, an unusual DNA structure, F-DNA, has been proposed as the basis for enzyme recognition of clusters of fC. We used NMR and X-ray crystallography to compare several modified DNA duplexes with unmodified analogs and found that in the crystal state the duplexes all belong to the A family, whereas in solution they are all members of the B family. We found that, contrary to previous findings, fC does not significantly affect the structure of DNA, although there are modest local differences at the modification sites. Hence, global conformation changes are unlikely to account for the recognition of this modified base, and our structural data favor a mechanism that operates at base-pair resolution for the recognition of fC by epigenome-modifying enzymes.


Subject(s)
Cytosine/analogs & derivatives , DNA/chemistry , DNA/metabolism , Nucleic Acid Conformation , Crystallography, X-Ray , Cytosine/metabolism , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy
17.
J Am Chem Soc ; 139(23): 7864-7871, 2017 06 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28453268

ABSTRACT

A strategy for affecting ortho versus meta/para selectivity in Ir-catalyzed C-H borylations (CHBs) of phenols is described. From selectivity observations with ArylOBpin (pin = pinacolate), it is hypothesized that an electrostatic interaction between the partial negatively charged OBpin group and the partial positively charged bipyridine ligand of the catalyst favors ortho selectivity. Experimental and computational studies designed to test this hypothesis support it. From further computational work a second generation, in silico designed catalyst emerged, where replacing Bpin with Beg (eg = ethylene glycolate) was predicted to significantly improve ortho selectivity. Experimentally, reactions employing B2eg2 gave ortho selectivities > 99%. Adding triethylamine significantly improved conversions. This ligand-substrate electrostatic interaction provides a unique control element for selective C-H functionalization.


Subject(s)
Boron Compounds/chemical synthesis , Iridium/chemistry , Organometallic Compounds/chemistry , Phenols/chemistry , Quantum Theory , Boron Compounds/chemistry , Ligands , Molecular Structure , Organometallic Compounds/chemical synthesis , Static Electricity
18.
J Am Chem Soc ; 139(16): 5965-5972, 2017 04 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28378578

ABSTRACT

Reactions that involve a combination of proton transfer and heavy-atom bonding changes are normally categorized by whether the proton transfer is occurring during the rate-limiting step, as in the distinction between general and specific acid-base catalysis. The experimental and computational study here of a ß-ketoacid decarboxylation shows how the distinction between the two mechanisms breaks down near its border due to the differing time scales for proton versus heavy-atom motion. Isotope effects in the decarboxylation of benzoylacetic acid support a transition state in which the proton transfer is complete. In quasiclassical trajectories passing through this transition state, the new O-H bond after proton transfer undergoes several vibrations before heavy-atom motion completes the reaction. The bonding changes are thus temporally separated at a "dynamic intermediate" structure that acts equivalently to an ordinary intermediate in the trajectories, including the reversal of trajectories at the intermediate when the second "step" fails, but the structure is not an energy minimum. The results define a border between mechanisms where the usual energetic definition of intermediates is not meaningful.


Subject(s)
Keto Acids/chemistry , Protons , Thermodynamics , Catalysis , Decarboxylation , Molecular Structure
19.
J Am Chem Soc ; 138(46): 15167-15176, 2016 11 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27794598

ABSTRACT

The regiochemistry of the nitration of toluene by NO2+BF4- in dichloromethane is accurately predicted from trajectories in explicit solvent. Simpler models and approaches based on transition state theory fail to account for the selectivity. Potential of mean force calculations find no free-energy barrier for reaction of the toluene/NO2+BF4- encounter complex, yet the trajectories require an extraordinary 3 ps to descend an exergonic slope. The selectivity is decided late in long trajectories because their completion requires solvent and counterion reorganization. The normal descriptive understanding of the regiochemistry based on transition-state energies is unsupported.


Subject(s)
Molecular Dynamics Simulation , Nitro Compounds/chemistry , Toluene/chemistry , Molecular Structure , Monte Carlo Method , Nitro Compounds/chemical synthesis , Quantum Theory , Stereoisomerism
20.
J Am Chem Soc ; 138(44): 14534-14537, 2016 11 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27764943

ABSTRACT

The comparison of experimental and predicted kinetic isotope effects in the α-cleavage of alkoxy radicals is used here to judge the applicability of statistical rate theories. It is found that the governing rate theory and the statistical versus nonstatistical nature of the cleavage depend on the cleavage barrier and how much energy is imparted to the radical. The latter can then be controlled by changing the size of substituents in the system. With a large alkyl group substituent, the vibrational energy of the alkoxy radical is increased, but this energy is not statistically distributed, leading to a lower isotope effect than predicted by statistical theories. The observed isotope effect can be approximately rationalized using a semistatistical localized RRKM model.


Subject(s)
Alcohols/chemistry , Computer Simulation , Molecular Structure , Solutions , Temperature
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