Open Access Article
Francesco
Fasano
,
Peter
Bolgar
,
Giulia
Iadevaia
and
Christopher A.
Hunter
*
Yusuf Hamied Department of Chemistry, University of Cambridge, Lensfield Road, Cambridge CB2 1EW, UK. E-mail: herchelsmith.orgchem@ch.cam.ac.uk
First published on 1st November 2022
Sandwich complexes formed by two zinc porphyrins and a diamine ligand (DABCO) have been used as a supramolecular template to direct the synthesis of triazole oligomers. Monomer units equipped with two polymerizable functional groups, an alkyne and an azide, were attached to the template via ester bonds between a phenol unit on the monomer and benzoic acid units on the porphyrin. Self-assembly of the zinc porphyrins by addition of DABCO led to a supramolecular complex containing four of the monomer units, two on each porphyrin. CuAAC oligomerisation was carried out in the presence of a chain capping agent to prevent intermolecular reactions between the templated products, which carry reactive chain ends. The templated-directed oligomerisation resulted in selective formation of a duplex, which contains two identical chains of triazole oligomers connecting the porphyrin linkers. The effective molarity for the intramolecular CuAAC reactions on the template is 3–9 mM, and because the triazole backbone has a direction, the product duplex was obtained as a 4
:
1 mixture of the parallel and antiparallel isomers. Hydrolysis of the ester bonds connecting the oligomers to the template gave a single product, the phenol 2-mer, in excellent yield. The introduction of a supramolecular element into the template considerably broadens the scope of the covalent template-directed oligomerisation methodology that we previously developed for the replication of sequence information in synthetic oligomers.
We have been working on an approach to template-directed oligomer synthesis based on covalent base-pairing (Fig. 1).20,21 The monomer building blocks (red) are attached to complementary sites (blue) on a template strand using kinetically stable covalent bonds to give a pre-ZIP intermediate. In the ZIP step, an oligomerisation reaction on the template gives the duplex. Finally, cleavage of the base-pairs releases the original template and the complementary copy. We have shown that this strategy can be successfully implemented in high yield by using phenol–benzoic acid esters for the base-pairing chemistry and copper-catalysed azide–alkyne cycloaddition (CuAAC) for the backbone ZIP reaction.22–24 In the absence of a template, macrocyclic 3-mers and 4-mers are the major products (Fig. 1a), but a 2-mer template can be used to direct exclusive formation of the linear 2-mer (Fig. 1b). This approach to oligomer synthesis is attractive because the sequence of the copy strand can be defined by the sequence of the template. However, separate synthesis of an oligomeric template is always required. Fig. 1c shows an alternative strategy for assembling monomers on a supramolecular template for oligomerisation.
In the first step of the supramolecular strategy shown in Fig. 1c, two monomers (red) are covalently attached to a disposable linker (grey). Dynamic non-covalent binding interactions between the linker units are then used to self-assemble an oligomeric pre-ZIP intermediate. The ZIP step forms both backbones of the duplex simultaneously. Finally, the cleave step gives the oligomeric product, where the length is defined by the number of units in the self-assembled pre-ZIP template. Here we demonstrate the viability of this strategy with the synthesis of 2-mers on a zinc porphyrin–DABCO (1,4-diazabicyclo[2.2.2]octane) template. Complexes of this type have been used previously for templated synthesis of cages,25 and metalloporphyrin coordination chemistry is compatible with metal-catalysed coupling reactions.26–32 Porphyrin–ligand complexes allow considerable flexibility, because different divalent ligands can be used to match the geometry of different duplex backbones, and different metal–ligand combinations can be used to tune the stability and length of the pre-ZIP intermediate.33–38
Scheme 2 shows three different phenol monomer building blocks: 7 is equipped with only an azide, 8 has both an azide and an alkyne, and 9 has only an alkyne. The synthesis of 8 and 9 have been described previously.20 Phenol 7 was prepared by reaction of 5 with benzyl bromide in the presence of sodium hydride, followed by TBAF deprotection (Scheme 2). The three phenol monomers were separately loaded onto porphyrin linker 4 using EDC coupling reactions, and the resulting porphyrins were then metalled with zinc acetate (Scheme 3). In zinc porphyrin 12, the linker is loaded with phenol monomers equipped with both an alkyne and azide, which would lead to polymers in the absence of a template under CuAAC conditions. In zinc porphyrin 10, the phenols are equipped with alkynes only, and in zinc porphyrin 11, the phenols are equipped with azides only. Thus the reaction between 10 and 11 can be used to investigation template effect of bidentate ligands on the CuAAC reaction without the complication of competing polymerisation processes.
:
1 sandwich complexes, including the pre-ZIP complex illustrated in Fig. 2a. When the CuAAC reaction between zinc porphyrins 10 and 11 was carried in the presence 0.5 equivalents of DABCO, the starting materials were completely consumed, and the major product was duplex 13 with small amounts of higher oligomers (Fig. 2c). In other words, DABCO acts as a positive template, promoting the formation of duplex at the expense of untemplated oligomerisation processes. This result shows that the spacing of the porphyrin linkers in the 2
:
1 DABCO sandwich complex is compatible with the length of the triazole backbone used in these compounds (Fig. 3a).
The DABCO complex of duplex 13 was isolated in 79% yield from the crude reaction mixture by recycling gel permeation chromatography (see ESI†). The HRMS-MALDI spectrum shown in Fig. 3b confirmed the presence of 13, but the ionisation conditions are too harsh for the intact DABCO complex to be observed. The presence of DABCO bound to 13 was confirmed by the 1H-NMR spectrum of the product obtained from the CuAAC reaction (Fig. 3c). The signal due to the DABCO protons appears as an upfield shifted multiplet between −5.0 and −4.5 ppm (blue). This chemical shift is characteristic of a zinc porphyrin·DABCO·zinc porphyrin sandwich complex, where the DABCO protons experience the combined ring current effects of both porphyrin π-systems. The multiplicity of the signal suggests that there are multiple conformations of the duplex, which are in slow exchange on the 1H NMR timescale, probably due to slow rotation around the four amide bonds in the constrained macrocyclic structure. However, these conformational isomers do not affect the signals due to the amide NCH2 groups (purple), which appear as two singlets between 5.0 and 5.5 ppm (Fig. 3c).
The high yield of duplex in the templated reaction and the fact that the DABCO complex survives chromatography suggest that the 13·DABCO complex is exceptionally stable. It was possible to remove the DABCO with formic acid to obtain duplex 13. The association constants for the interaction of DABCO with 13 and with the corresponding zinc porphyrin monomer 10 were measured using UV-visible absorption spectroscopy in chloroform (Fig. 4). On addition of DABCO to 10, the Soret band of the zinc porphyrin at 426 nm was replaced by an absorption at 436 nm due to the 1
:
1 DABCO complex with a clear isosbestic point, indicating a simple two-state equilibrium (Fig. 4a). The data fit well to a 1
:
1 binding isotherm (Fig. 4b) giving an association constant of 1.8 × 105 M−1, which is typical of a 1
:
1 zinc porphyrin·DABCO complex.39 On addition of DABCO to 13, a new Soret band appeared at 430 nm, and the exciton shift of 6 nm relative to the DABCO·10 complex is characteristic of formation of a zinc porphyrin·DABCO·zinc porphyrin sandwich complex (Fig. 4c). A clear isosbestic point was observed, and the data fit well to a 1
:
1 binding isotherm (Fig. 4d). The resulting association constant is three orders of magnitude larger than the value measured for 10 (K = 2.1 × 108 M−1), which confirms cooperative formation of two zinc-nitrogen coordination bonds in the complex.39 These experiments are consistent with the templating results and suggest that DABCO is a good fit for triazole backbone.
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| Fig. 5 DABCO templated synthesis of duplexes p-15 and a-15. The relative orientations of backbones are indicated with purple arrows for parallel and green arrows for antiparallel. | ||
Templated oligomerisation of 12 in the presence of 0.5 equivalents of DABCO and 0.4 mM 14 gave the DABCO complexes of 15 in 48% yield after isolation by size exclusion chromatography (Fig. 5). The 1H-NMR spectrum of the product in Fig. 6a shows a multiplet due to the DABCO protons between −5.0 and −4.5 ppm (blue), which is indicative of a zinc porphyrin·DABCO·zinc porphyrin sandwich complex and is very similar to the spectrum obtained for the DABCO complex of duplex 13 (cf.Fig. 3c). The NCH2 region of the 1H NMR spectrum shows three major signals (green) as well as a set of minor signals (purple) between 5 and 6 ppm. This observation is consistent with the formation of two isomeric duplexes, a-15 and p-15, in different amounts, and integration of the signals gives a product distribution of 80
:
20.14
DABCO was removed from the products by washing with aqueous formic acid, but the resulting mixture of the two isomeric duplexes a-15 and p-15 could not be separated by chromatography. A UV-visible titration was therefore carried out by adding DABCO to this mixture. A new Soret band was observed at 430 nm, characteristic of a zinc porphyrin·DABCO·zinc porphyrin sandwich complex (Fig. 6b). We assume that the association constant for DABCO binding to the parallel duplex p-15 is the same as that for binding to duplex 13, because both have parallel backbones and the only differences in structure are the peripheral groups on the chain ends. The titration data for 15 could therefore be fit to an isotherm that allowed for formation of two different 1
:
1 complexes (Fig. 6c). The association constant for p-15 was fixed at the value measured for 13 (Kp = 2.1 × 108 M−1), and the association constant for a-15 was optimised giving a value of Ka = 8.6 × 106 M−1. In addition, the relative proportion of the two isomers was treated as a variable, and optimisation of this parameter gave a product distribution of 80% a-15 and 20% p-15, which is in good agreement with the integration of the 1H NMR signals.
It is worth noting that the duplex obtained in highest yield from the templating process has a slightly lower affinity for DABCO. There must be a difference between the geometry of the triazole backbone in the product duplex compared with the geometry of the transition state of the templated CuAAC reaction, which leads to this difference in behaviour.
Fig. 8a shows the result of carrying out the CuAAC reaction followed by ester hydrolysis for a 1
:
1
:
1 mixture of 10, 11 and DABCO in the presence of increasing amounts of 14. In the absence of 14, only the phenol 2-mer 20 was observed. When millimolar concentrations of capping azide were introduced, a mixture of all three products was observed. At higher concentrations of 14 (7 mM), the intramolecular reaction was completely suppressed, and the only products observed were 21 and 7. The same experiment was carried out for a 2
:
1 mixture of 12 and DABCO in the presence of increasing amounts of capping azide 14 (Fig. 8b). In the absence of 14, only oligomeric products were obtained, because after the intramolecular ZIP reactions take place, the terminal alkyne and azide groups on the duplex continue to react in an intermolecular fashion. Small amounts of capping agent (<1 mM) suppress these intramolecular processes, so that the phenol 2-mer 22 was the only major product obtained after hydrolysis. At higher concentrations of capping agent, intermolecular reactions with 14 start to compete with the intramolecular ZIP process, leading to formation of the capped monomer 23.
In principle, the EM can be determined from the concentration of capping agent at which the yields of products due to intermolecular and intramolecular processes are equal (i.e. monomer and 2-mer). However, there is a 5-fold difference in reactivity between the aliphatic capping azide and the aromatic azides on the phenol monomers, which must also be taken into account.14 The relationship between the product distribution and the concentration of capping agent is shown in Fig. 9. Since the intermolecular process results in two phenol monomers, the integrated absorbance of the HPLC peak due to monomer can be directly compared with the peak due to the 2-mer product to obtain a direct measure of the relative yields of intermolecular versus intramolecular processes (eqn (1)).
| Ainter/Aintra = 5[cap]/EM | (1) |
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| Fig. 9 Product distribution for the templated reaction of 10 with 11 (red), and for the templated oligomerisation of 12 (black) in the presence of different concentrations of 14 ([cap]). The data are plotted as the ratio of the area of the HPLC peaks assigned to the product of the intermolecular reaction with the capping agent (Ainter for 21 and 23) compared with the area of the HPLC peaks assigned to the product of the intramolecular ZIP reaction (Aintra for 20 and 22). Reactions were carried out using 10 (15 μM) and 11 (15 μM), or 12 (15 μM), with CuTBTA (0.02 mM) in CH2Cl2 at room temperature for 16 h, followed by hydrolysis with LiOH (1 M). The lines represent the best fit to eqn (1). | ||
The value of EM for the templated reaction between 10 and 11 is 3 mM, whereas the EM for the templated oligomerisation of 12 is 9 mM. Since 10 and 11 can only form the parallel duplex 13, this result implies that the higher EM observed for 12 is due to preferential formation of the antiparallel duplex a-15. These EM values represent composite values of the two different CuAAC reactions required to assemble the duplex. The reaction to connect the first backbone linkage takes place on the 2
:
1 zinc porphyrin·DABCO·zinc porphyrin sandwich complex, and in this case, there is no parallel-antiparallel issue. The difference between parallel and antiparallel only becomes apparent for 12 on closing the second backbone linkage to give the duplex. The values of EM for the first and second reactions are likely to be different but are difficult to separate. Nevertheless, if we assume that 3 mM and 9 mM represent the values of EM for formation of parallel and antiparallel duplexes respectively, we would predict a product distribution for templated oligomerisation of 12 of 75% a-15 and 25% p-15, which is consistent with the UV-visible titration and 1H NMR results. These values of EM for the supramolecular zinc porphyrin·DABCO template can be compared with the corresponding values measured previously for formation of parallel and antiparallel duplexes using the same phenol monomer 8 on a covalent template (Fig. 1b). In this case, the values of EM were one to two orders of magnitude higher, and there was significantly higher selectivity for the antiparallel (EM = 200–500 mM) relative to the parallel (EM = 20–30 mM) duplex.14
:
1 zinc porphyrin·DABCO·zinc porphyrin sandwich complexes as the supramolecular template. Monomer units equipped with two polymerizable functional groups, an alkyne and an azide, were attached to the template via ester bonds between a phenol unit on the monomer and benzoic acid units on the porphyrin. Self-assembly of the zinc porphyrins by addition of DABCO lead to a supramolecular complex containing four of the monomer units, two on each porphyrin. CuAAC oligomerisation was carried out in the presence of a chain capping agent to prevent intermolecular reactions between the templated products, which carry reactive chain ends. The templated-directed oligomerisation resulted in selective formation of a duplex, which contains two identical chains of triazole oligomers connecting the porphyrin linkers. The effective molarity for the intramolecular CuAAC reactions on the template is 3–9 mM, and because the triazole backbone has a direction, the product duplex is obtained as a 4
:
1 mixture of the parallel and antiparallel isomers. Hydrolysis of the ester bonds connecting the oligomers to the template gave a single product, the phenol 2-mer, in excellent yield. These experiments show that supramolecular assemblies can be used as disposable templates for controlling covalent reactions to give products that are inaccessible via solution phase oligomerisation processes. The example described here used zinc porphyrins, which coordinate a single ligand on one face of the porphyrin. Cobalt porphyrins can coordinate two ligands, one on each face of the porphyrin, which would lead to supramolecular polymers in the presence of bidentate ligands, and we are currently investigating template-directed synthesis of longer oligomers using this approach.40 In more general terms, any supramolecular assembly could be used as the template, so that the oligomerisation reaction provides a method for printing supramolecular assemblies as covalent copies.
Footnote |
| † Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: Materials and methods, synthetic procedures, spectroscopic characterization of all compounds, and details of templating reactions. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d2sc04155c |
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