Yerushalmi Roie, Brandis Alexander, Rosenbach-Belkin Varda, Baldridge Kim K, Scherz Avigdor
Department of Plant Sciences, The Weizmann Institute of Science, 76100 Rehovot, Israel.
J Phys Chem A. 2006 Jan 19;110(2):412-21. doi: 10.1021/jp052809+.
Hydrogen bonds play an important role in an overwhelming variety of fields from biology to surface and supramolecular chemistry. The term "hydrogen bond" refers to a wide range of interactions with various covalent and polar contributions. In particular, hydrogen bonds have an important role in the folding and packing of peptides and nucleic acids. Recent studies also point to the importance of hydrogen bonding in the context of second-shell interactions, in metal binding and selectivity in metalloproteins, and in controlling the dynamics of membrane proteins. In this study, we demonstrate and quantify the modulation of fragmental charge transfer from hydrogen-bonded ligands to a metal center, by employing our recently introduced molecular potentiometer. The molecular details that affect this type of fragmental charge transfer are presented and a path for transferring chemical information is demonstrated. We found that H-bond interactions in the extended positions of axial ligands provide an effective means of modulating the amount of fragmental charge transfer to a metal center, thereby dramatically influencing the electronic properties of the ligand, the binding affinity, and the binding of additional ligands. The magnitude of fragmental charge-transfer modulation induced by a single ligand-solvent H-bond interaction is comparable to those induced by covalent substitution, although H-bond enthalpy is only on the order of several kilojoules per mole. Importantly, we find a significant change in the ligand electronic properties, even for weak C-H...O=C H-bond formation, where the bond enthalpy is substantially lower than for conventional H-bond interactions. The excess fragmental charge transferred to the metal center, deduced from the spectroscopic measurements, correlates well with the computationally determined values. Our findings underscore the importance of second-shell interactions in the active sites of enzymes, beyond the structural and electrostatic importance that is widely recognized today.
氢键在从生物学到表面化学和超分子化学等众多领域中都起着重要作用。“氢键”一词指的是具有各种共价和极性贡献的广泛相互作用。特别是,氢键在肽和核酸的折叠与堆积中具有重要作用。最近的研究还指出了氢键在第二壳层相互作用、金属蛋白中的金属结合和选择性以及控制膜蛋白动力学方面的重要性。在本研究中,我们通过使用我们最近引入的分子电位计,展示并量化了从氢键配体到金属中心的碎片电荷转移的调制。呈现了影响这种类型碎片电荷转移的分子细节,并展示了一条传递化学信息的途径。我们发现轴向配体延伸位置的氢键相互作用提供了一种有效的手段来调节到金属中心的碎片电荷转移量,从而显著影响配体的电子性质、结合亲和力以及额外配体的结合。尽管氢键焓仅为每摩尔几千焦耳的量级,但单个配体 - 溶剂氢键相互作用诱导的碎片电荷转移调制幅度与共价取代诱导的幅度相当。重要的是,即使对于键焓远低于传统氢键相互作用的弱C - H...O = C氢键形成,我们也发现配体电子性质有显著变化。从光谱测量推导得出的转移到金属中心的过量碎片电荷与计算确定的值相关性良好。我们的发现强调了酶活性位点中第二壳层相互作用的重要性,这超出了当今广泛认可的结构和静电重要性。