催化中国, 中国催化分享 http://blog.sciencenet.cn/u/catachina 化学家(www.chemj.cn)

博文

Catalysis in a cavity

已有 3029 次阅读 2007-11-10 10:09 |个人分类:催化科技导读


Catalysis in a cavity


08 November 2007

Chemists in the US have created a molecular vase that mimics an enzyme's catalytic activity.

Chemical catalysts are chemoselective - they are able to recognise and transform a particular functional group - but few are capable of differentiating differently sized or shaped molecules with the same functional groups. This is where enzymes have an advantage. They are usually very specific about which reactions they catalyse: the shape of the starting material and its interaction with the enzyme being important factors in that specificity.

Julius Rebek, Jr. and Richard Hooley from the Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, California, have set themselves the goal of creating chemical systems that match the selective catalytic abilities of enzymes whilst retaining the properties of normal chemical catalysts.

Molecular vase
An imide molecule fits snugly in the molecular cavity,
perfectly primed to react with an alcohol
The researchers synthesised a vase-shaped molecule, called a cavitand, and used it to catalyse a Diels-Alder reaction between an unsaturated imide and an aromatic alcohol. 

Rebek's system mimics an enzyme in that the cavitand has a cavity in which only an appropriately sized starting material can fit. A hydrogen bonding network at the rim of the cavity, similar to that found in enzymes, activates the starting material - the unsaturated imide - by sucking electron density from the double bond. This increases its reactivity and accelerates its Diels-Alder reaction with the aromatic alcohol. The product is too big to fit in the cavity and is ejected, leaving the cavity free to activate another molecule of starting material.

Rebek aims to improve the cavitand so that its hydrogen bonding network is positioned directly at the bound starting material. This would allow more challenging reactions to be accelerated and catalysed.

Nicola Burton

Link to journal article

A deep cavitand catalyzes the Diels–Alder reaction of bound maleimides
Richard J. Hooley and Julius Rebek Jr., Org. Biomol. Chem., 2007, 5, 3631
DOI: 10.1039/b713104f

Also of interest

Catalytic complexity

UK chemists have isolated an unusual type of solvent complex that might play a crucial role as an intermediate in catalytic reactions.

Membranes do the trick

Researchers in the UK and New Zealand have shown that using a membrane could help catalysts operating in the same system work more efficiently.

Cagey compounds carry copper

Copper bracelets are an age-old folk remedy for rheumatoid arthritis. Now scientists are playing catch-up.



https://blog.sciencenet.cn/blog-3913-10575.html

上一篇:中国科大建成高空间分辨X射线成像实验站
下一篇:【催化基础知识普及】催化剂表面积碳以及碳物种表征
收藏 IP: .*| 热度|

0

发表评论 评论 (0 个评论)

数据加载中...
扫一扫,分享此博文

Archiver|手机版|科学网 ( 京ICP备07017567号-12 )

GMT+8, 2024-4-25 23:21

Powered by ScienceNet.cn

Copyright © 2007- 中国科学报社

返回顶部