Open Access Article
Daniel P.
Donnelly
ab,
Jeffrey N.
Agar
ab and
Steven A.
Lopez
*a
aDepartment of Chemistry and Chemical Biology, Northeastern University, 360 Huntington Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA
bBarnett Institute of Chemical and Biological Analysis, Northeastern University, 360 Huntington Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA
First published on 29th April 2019
Cyclic thiosulfinates are a class of biocompatible molecules, currently expanding our in vivo toolkit. Agar and co-workers have shown that they are capable of efficient cross-linking reactions. While strain energy has been shown to promote the nucleophilic substitution reactions of cyclic disulfides, the reactivities of cyclic thiosulfinate nucleophilic substitution is unexplored. We used density functional theory calculations [M06-2X/6-311++G(d,p)] to determine the activation and reaction free energies for the reactions of 3–10-membered cyclic thiosulfinates and cyclic disulfides with methyl thiolate. The nucleophilic substitution reaction of cyclic thiosulfinates was found to be strain-promoted, similar to the strain-promoted nucleophilic substitution reactions of cyclic disulfides. The origin of the nearly 100-fold rate enhancement of cyclic thiosulfinates over cyclic disulfides was understood using the distortion/interaction model and natural bond order analysis. The cyclic thiosulfinates benefit from a hyperconjugative interaction between an oxygen lone pair and the
orbital
. This interaction generally lengthens the reactant S1–S2 bond, which pre-distorts cyclic thiosulfinates to resemble their corresponding transition structures. The inductive effect of the oxygen in cyclic thiosulfinates lowers the
orbital energies relative to cyclic disulfides and results in more stabiliizing transition state frontier molecular orbital interactions with methyl thiolate.
17 calculations to show that the reactivities of cyclic disulfides towards biological thiolate-based nucleophiles were strain-promoted.18,19 Bachrach and co-workers used DFT calculations to locate transition structures for the nucleophilic substitution reactions of a model thiolate to a series of cyclic disulfides.20 This computational study builds on the results of Whitesides and Bachrach to determine the origin of the increased nucleophilic substitution reactivities of 3–10-membered cyclic thiosulfinates relative to cyclic disulfides (Scheme 1). A rigorous conformational search was employed to identify the global minima of reactants, ring-opened intermediates, and the lowest-energy transition structures. The DFT calculations are used to predict the reactivities of 3–10-membered cyclic thiosulfinates (3–10)a towards a model thiolate (methyl thiolate) by locating transition structures and disulfide-exchange intermediates. The corresponding activation free energies and reaction energies (ΔG‡ and ΔGrxn, respectively) were compared to those of an analogous series of cyclic disulfides to understand why cyclic thiosulfinates are more reactive than cyclic disulfides towards thiolates.
For the most strained reactants, (3–4)a and (3–4)b, the reaction energies for the nucleophilic addition of MeS− range from −11.9 to −11.7 and −16.9 to −16.7 kcal mol−1, respectively. These reactions are exergonic because ring strain is released upon ring-opening. (5–7)a and (5–7)b lead to endergonic reaction energies ranging from 1.2 to 4.4 kcal mol−1 and 1.2 to 5.1 kcal mol−1, respectively. The larger cyclic structures, (8–10)a and (8–10)b have reaction free energies that range from −2.3 to −4.6 kcal mol−1 and +0.7 to −1.5 kcal mol−1, respectively.
The reaction energies of these series follow a similar trend to cycloalkanes in which (3–4)a and (3–4)b are significantly strained, (5–7)a and (5–7)b are relatively unstrained, and (8–10)a and (8–10)b are moderately strained.20–22 The longer S1–S2 bond in the thiacycles relieves some strain compared the corresponding cycloalkanes (e.g., 1,2-dithiolane vs. cyclopentane).
We assessed the reactivities of the cyclic thiosulfinates and cyclic disulfides towards methyl thiolate by locating transition structures and computing their corresponding activation free energies and enthalpies (Fig. 1). The transition structures shown in Fig. 1 generally have a nearly linear MeS−–S1–S2 angle; the transition states range from exactly synchronous to asynchronous. The breaking S1–S2 bonds of TS-(3–10)a and TS-(3–10)b range from 2.26–2.48 Å and 2.26–2.50 Å, respectively. The S–S1 distance in TS-(3–10)a and TS-(3–10)b ranges from 2.42–2.72 Å and 2.39–2.79 Å, respectively. TS-10b is exactly synchronous (2.46 Å), while TS-5b is the most asynchronous (2.56 and 2.38 Å). The C–C and C–S σ bonds of (3–4)a and (3–4)b are well-described by Walsh orbitals due to the nearly 60° and 90° bonding angles, respectively. As such, incipient nucleophiles will interact with bent S1–S2 σ* orbitals, which results in the non-linear transition state geometries of TS-(3–4)a and TS-(3–4)b. The activation free energies of the smallest rings TS-(3–4)a and TS-(3–4)b are the lowest (2.3–4.4 kcal mol−1). The low activation energies of (3–4)a and (3–4)b are consistent with the established strain-promoted reactions of cyclic disulfides. The activation free of energies of TS-(5–10)a are generally higher and range from 10.9 to 13.1 kcal mol−1. The activation free energies of TS-(6–10)a are substantially lower than those of TS-(6–10)b; ΔΔG‡ range from −2.5 to −7.4 kcal mol−1, which corresponds to a 102–105-fold rate enhancement for cyclic thiosulfinates relative to cyclic disulfides.
Fig. 2 shows a linear correlation between ΔG‡ and −ΔGrxn for the cyclic disulfide and cyclic thiosulfinate reactions (R2 = 0.81 and 0.80, respectively). This suggests that strain energy controls the reactivities for a broad set of cyclic disulfides and establishes that the reactivities of cyclic thiosulfinates are also controlled by strain energy. The activation free energies of cyclic thiosulfinates are generally lower than those of cyclic disulfides; the y-intercept values are 11.3 and 14.7 kcal mol−1, respectively.
The distortion energies of cyclic thiosulfinates (3–10)a range from 3.7 to 14.3 kcal mol−1 and the distortion energies of cyclic disulfides (3–10)b range from 4.3 to 20.6 kcal mol−1. We plotted activation energies against distortion energies for the reactions of cyclic thiosulfinates (blue) and cyclic disulfides (red) in Fig. 4. These plots show that there is a linear relationship between ΔE‡ and ΔE‡d for cyclic disulfides (R2 = 0.88) and cyclic thiosulfinates (R2 = 0.84). This suggests that the reactivities are controlled by distortion energy. The interaction energies of cyclic thiosulfinates (3–10)a and cyclic disulfides (3–10)b range from −6.1 to −11.2 kcal mol−1 and −6.9 to −14.4 kcal mol−1, respectively. There is no correlation between ΔE‡ and ΔE‡i (R2 = 0.001 for cyclic thiosulfinates and R2 = 0.05 for cyclic disulfides), which implies that the interaction energies do not influence reactivities. We hypothesized that the strain energy would manifest itself as a structural pre-distortion of the reactants, an effect that results in distortion-accelerated reactions.34 To this end, we analyzed (3–10)a and (3–10)b in their equilibrium and distorted transition state geometries; strained cyclic thiosulfinates and disulfides require less distortion to achieve their transition state geometries. This is demonstrated in Fig. 5, where we show the relationship between distortion energy and the difference in S1–S2 bond lengths in the reactant and transition state (ΔS1–S2).
The reactions with the lowest activation energies resulted from reactants with the longest (pre-distorted) S1–S2 bonds at equilibrium. The linear relationship between ΔE‡d and ΔS1–S2 (R2 = 0.97) confirms that the S1–S2 pre-distortion of cyclic thiosulfinates results in lower activation energies.
We then scrutinized the geometric and electronic structures of the cyclic thiosulfinates to understand why they are more pre-distorted than the cyclic disulfides. One of the oxygen lone pair orbitals adjacent to the S1–S2 bond is ideally positioned for a hyperconjugative interaction with the
orbital, via the general anomeric effect, which stabilizes the developing electron deficiency in the breaking S1–S2 bond. There is a rich literature on this effect from the experimental and theoretical communities.35–42Fig. 6 illustrates the possible
orbital interaction.
We quantified this effect with natural bond order (NBO)43 calculations and second order perturbation theory analysis on the optimized structures of the cyclic thiosulfinates. Table 2 shows the hyperconjugative
interaction energies, and the effect on S1–S2 bond lengths.
energies, and the interaction energies between the nO and
orbitals
| S1–S2a | Energy, nOb | Energy, b | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
a S1–S2 bond lengths are reported in Å.
b
energies are reported in kcal mol−1.
|
||||
| 3a | 2.12 | −10.07 | −0.54 | −47.3 |
| 4a | 2.17 | −9.87 | −0.17 | −40.3 |
| 5a | 2.14 | −9.74 | 0.38 | −35.8 |
| 6a | 2.13 | −9.74 | 0.47 | −35.4 |
| 7a | 2.15 | −9.75 | 0.32 | −36.9 |
| 8a | 2.14 | −9.77 | 0.45 | −35.9 |
| 9a | 2.13 | −9.69 | 0.53 | −33.9 |
| 10a | 2.13 | −9.70 | 0.53 | −35.8 |
S1–S2 bond distances, energies for the nO and
orbitals participating in the hyperconjugative interaction, and the energies of the corresponding
interactions are given in Table 2. The σ framework of 3a and 4a have relatively high-lying σ orbitals because of the increased p-character associated with the so-called banana bonds.44 As such, 3a and 4a benefit from smaller energy gaps between the nO and
orbitals, which results in
interaction energies of −47.3 and −40.3 kcal mol−1, respectively. (5–10)a have smaller, but similar, orbital interaction energies (−33.9 to −36.9 kcal mol−1), because of the larger energy gap between the nO and
orbitals and linear
orbitals.
We then compared the
orbital energies of cyclic thiosulfinates to those of cyclic disulfides to quantify the extent in which the
hyperconjugative interaction contributes to nucleophilic substitution rate-enhancement. The HOMO energy of methyl thiolate, the
orbital (LUMO) energies of (3–10)a and (3–10)b, and the occupancies of the
and nO orbitals are shown in Fig. 7.
The
energies of cyclic thiosulfinates range from −0.54 to 0.53 eV; the
energies of cyclic disulfides range from 0.74 to 2.37 eV. The
orbitals of cyclic thiosulfinates are relatively low-lying because of the adjacent oxygen that is inductively electron withdrawing. The electron density of the sulfoxide oxygen disfavors nucleophilic attack of thiolates at S1 because of substantial closed-shell repulsions with the incipient thiolate lone pair orbitals. (3–4)a and (3–4)b feature bent
orbitals because of the small C–S–S bond angles in the three- and four-membered rings (54° and 78°, respectively). The nO orbitals of cyclic thiosulfinates have reduced occupancies (1.77–1.81e) from the ideal value of 2.00e due to the hyperconjugative interaction; the
orbitals of cyclic thiosulfinates have increased occupancies (0.17–0.20e) from the ideal value of 0.00e. The large stabilizing
energies corroborate the proposed hyperconjugation between the nO and the
orbitals. Cyclic disulfides have a significantly lower occupancy of the
orbitals ranging from 0.00–0.03e. The generally lower
orbital energies of cyclic thiosulfinates, resulting from the
interaction, lead to stronger frontier molecular orbital interactions with the MeS− lone pair orbitals in the transition state. These more favorable interactions contribute to the general rate-enhancement of nucleophilic substitution towards cyclic thiosulfinates.
orbital and the corresponding orbital energies and occupancies. All chemical structures were prepared using CylView.51 The ESI† was prepared using ESIgen.52
orbitals that contribute to their significantly higher strain-dependence and lower activation barriers through increased p-character. The S1–S2 bonds in cyclic thiosulfinates (6–10)a are pre-distorted towards their transition structures and require less distortion energy (ΔE‡d) to deform reactants from their equilibrium geometries relative to corresponding cyclic disulfides (6–10)b. This results in generally lower activation barriers. A hyperconjugative interaction between the oxygen lone pair and the
orbitals
is responsible for the pre-distortion of cyclic thiosulfinates and was verified by decreased occupancies of nO orbitals and increased occupancies of
orbitals. The activation barriers are further lowered because the
orbital energies are decreased by an inductive effect of the adjacent oxygen, which improves transition state frontier molecular orbital interactions. This effect is not observed in cyclic disulfides which have higher energy
orbitals. These theoretical insights have begun to guide our development of new cross-linking tools that avoid toxic dead-end modifications and increase reaction rates in vitro and in vivo. We predict that cyclic thiosulfinate 7a will make the best cross-linking scaffold. Its relatively low strain energy results in a reversible nucleophilic substitution reaction, which will prevent off-target (dead-end) modification of cysteine residues. Additionally, the nucleophilic substitution towards 7a is 7.4 kcal mol−1 lower in activation energy than 7b, resulting in a 105-fold increase in reaction rate.
Footnote |
| † Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/c9sc01098j |
| This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2019 |