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Artificial receptors that provides a preorganized hydrophobic environment: A biomimetic approach to dopamine recognition in water SCIE SCOPUS

Title
Artificial receptors that provides a preorganized hydrophobic environment: A biomimetic approach to dopamine recognition in water
Authors
Kim, JRaman, BAhn, KH
Date Issued
2006-01-06
Publisher
AMER CHEMICAL SOC
Abstract
The recognition of dopamine in water has been achieved with tripodal oxazoline-based artificial receptors, capable of providing a preorganized hydrophobic environment by rational design, which mimics a hydrophobic pocket predicted for a human D2 receptor. The receptors show an amphiphilic nature owing to the presence of hydrophilic sulfonate groups at the periphery of the tripodal oxazoline ligands, which seems to contribute in forming the preorganized hydrophobic environment. The artificial receptors recognized dopamine hydrochloride in water with reasonable selectivity among various organoammonium guests examined. The observed binding behavior of the receptors was explained by evoking guest inclusion in the preorganized hydrophobic pocket-like environment and not by simple ion-pairing interactions. The rationally predicted 1: 1 inclusion binding mode was supported by binding studies such as with a reference receptor that cannot provide a similar binding pocket, Job and VT-NMR experiments, electrospray ionization mass analysis, and guest selectivity data. This study implies that an effective hydrophobic environment can be generated even from an acyclic, small molecular artificial receptor. Such a preorganized hydrophobic environment, as being utilized in biological systems, can be effectively used as a complementary binding force for the recognition of or-anoammonium guests such as dopamine hydrochloride in water.
Keywords
SELECTIVE ADRENALINE RECOGNITION; CHIRAL MOLECULAR RECOGNITION; BINDING; STABILITY; CONSTANTS; TRANSPORT; CROWN; IONS; CHEMOSENSOR; POLYAMINES
URI
https://oasis.postech.ac.kr/handle/2014.oak/24247
DOI
10.1021/JO051630S
ISSN
0022-3263
Article Type
Article
Citation
JOURNAL OF ORGANIC CHEMISTRY, vol. 71, no. 1, page. 38 - 45, 2006-01-06
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안교한AHN, KYO HAN
Dept of Chemistry
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