Conformational Selection as the Mechanism of Guest Binding in a Flexible Supramolecular Host
Article 2017 en
Authors
CH
Cynthia Hong
DK
David M. Kaphan
RB
Robert G. Bergman
Abstract
1 min read
This study offers a detailed mechanistic investigation of host-guest encapsulation behavior in a new enzyme-mimetic metal-ligand host and provides the first observation of a conformational selection mechanism (as opposed to induced fit) in a supramolecular system. The Ga<sub>4</sub>L<sub>4</sub> host described features a C<sub>3</sub>-symmetric ligand motif with meta-substituted phenyl spacers, which enables the host to initially self-assemble into an S<sub>4</sub>-symmetric structure and then subsequently isomerize to a T-symmetric tetrahedron for better accommodation of a sufficiently large guest. Selective inversion recovery <sup>1</sup>H NMR studies provide structural insights into the self-exchange behaviors of the host and the guest individually in this dynamic system. Kinetic analysis of the encapsulation-isomerization event revealed that increasing the concentration of guest inhibits the rate of host-guest relaxation, a key distinguishing feature of conformational selection. A comprehensive study of this simple enzyme mimic provides insight into analogous behavior in biophysics and enzymology and aims to inform the design of efficient self-assembled microenvironment catalysts.
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