Ashbaugh Henry S, Gibb Bruce C, Suating Paolo
Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, Tulane University, New Orleans, Louisiana 70118, United States.
Department of Chemistry, Tulane University, New Orleans, Louisiana 70118, United States.
J Phys Chem B. 2021 Apr 8;125(13):3253-3268. doi: 10.1021/acs.jpcb.0c11017. Epub 2021 Mar 2.
Water is the dominant liquid on Earth. Despite this, the main focus of supramolecular chemistry research has been on binding and assembly events in organic solvents. This arose because it is more straightforward to synthesize organic-media-soluble hosts and because of the relative simplicity of organic solvents compared to water. Nature, however, relies on water as a solvent, and spurred by this fact, supramolecular chemists have recently been making forays into the aqueous domain to understand water-mediated non-covalent interactions. These studies can benefit from the substantial understanding of the hydrophobic effect and electrostatic interactions developed by physical chemists. Nearly 20 years ago, the Gibb group first synthesized a class of water-soluble host molecules, the deep-cavity cavitands, that possess non-polar pockets that readily bind non-polar moieties in aqueous solution and are capable of assembling into a wide range of complexes with distinct stoichiometries. As such, these amphipathic host species are ideal platforms for studying the role of negatively curved features on guest complexation and the structural requirements for guided assembly processes driven by the hydrophobic effect. Here we review the collaborative experimental and computational investigations between Gibb and Ashbaugh over the past 10 years exploring questions including the following: How does water wet/solvate the non-polar surfaces of non-polar pockets? How does this wetting control the binding of non-polar guests? How does wetting affect the binding of anionic species? How does the nature and size of a guest size impact the assembly of cavitand hosts into multimeric capsular complexes? What are the conformational motifs of guests packed within the confines of capsular complexes? How might the electrostatic environment engendered by hosts impact the properties and reactivity of internalized guests?
水是地球上占主导地位的液体。尽管如此,超分子化学研究的主要焦点一直是有机溶剂中的结合和组装过程。这是因为合成可溶于有机介质的主体更为直接,而且与水相比,有机溶剂相对简单。然而,自然界依赖水作为溶剂,受这一事实的推动,超分子化学家最近开始涉足水相领域,以了解水介导的非共价相互作用。这些研究可以受益于物理化学家对疏水效应和静电相互作用的深入理解。大约20年前,吉布小组首次合成了一类水溶性主体分子,即深腔穴番,它们具有非极性口袋,能够在水溶液中轻松结合非极性部分,并能够组装成具有不同化学计量比的多种配合物。因此,这些两亲性主体物种是研究负曲率特征对客体络合作用的作用以及由疏水效应驱动的导向组装过程的结构要求的理想平台。在这里,我们回顾了吉布和阿什baugh在过去10年中进行的合作实验和计算研究,探讨了以下问题:水如何润湿/溶剂化非极性口袋的非极性表面?这种润湿如何控制非极性客体的结合?润湿如何影响阴离子物种的结合?客体的性质和大小如何影响穴番主体组装成多聚体胶囊配合物?封装在胶囊配合物范围内的客体的构象基序是什么?主体产生的静电环境如何影响内化客体的性质和反应性?