Issue 5, 2008

Synthetic cation transporters incorporating crown ethers and calixarenes as headgroups and central relays: a comparison of sodium and chloride selectivity

Abstract

An earlier study showed that a calix[4]arene could function as a central relay unit to form an ion conductance pathway through a phospholipid bilayer membrane. The present study expands the range of compounds from calix[4]arene to calix[6]arene and incorporates them either as central units or as headgroups, substituting one or more diaza-18-crown-6 residues in functioning hydraphiles. Ion release was assayed by detecting either Na+ or Cl release from phospholipid vesicles. The ion transport activity for calix[4]arenes in either position is modest, but is almost non-existent when calix[6] residues were incorporated either as head groups or central relay units. The poor activity of the calix[6]arenes may result from an inability to penetrate to the midplane of the bilayer or pass entirely through it to form a conductance pathway. The transmembrane “flip-flop” may result from high polarity or steric bulk, or both. A hydraphile incorporating a single –NHCOC6H4OCH2CONH– as a central relay proved to be an excellent Na+ conductor, but less selective for Cl. The fact that this new hydraphile molecule shows selectivity for Na+ over Cltransport and possesses two secondary amide residues in the central relay suggests a means to control ion selectivity in synthetic ion transporters.

Graphical abstract: Synthetic cation transporters incorporating crown ethers and calixarenes as headgroups and central relays: a comparison of sodium and chloride selectivity

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
12 Dec 2007
Accepted
18 Mar 2008
First published
07 Apr 2008

New J. Chem., 2008,32, 878-890

Synthetic cation transporters incorporating crown ethers and calixarenes as headgroups and central relays: a comparison of sodium and chloride selectivity

J. Carlos Iglesias-Sánchez, W. Wang, R. Ferdani, P. Prados, J. de Mendoza and G. W. Gokel, New J. Chem., 2008, 32, 878 DOI: 10.1039/B719235P

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