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Reconciling Electrostatic and n→π* Orbital Contributions in Carbonyl Interactions.

Kamila B MuchowskaDominic J PascoeStefan BorsleyIvan V SmolyarIoulia K MatiCatherine AdamGary S NicholKenneth B LingScott L Cockroft
Published in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2020)
Interactions between carbonyl groups are prevalent in protein structures. Earlier investigations identified dominant electrostatic dipolar interactions, while others implicated lone pair n→π* orbital delocalisation. Here these observations are reconciled. A combined experimental and computational approach confirmed the dominance of electrostatic interactions in a new series of synthetic molecular balances, while also highlighting the distance-dependent observation of inductive polarisation manifested by n→π* orbital delocalisation. Computational fiSAPT energy decomposition and natural bonding orbital analyses correlated with experimental data to reveal the contexts in which short-range inductive polarisation augment electrostatic dipolar interactions. Thus, we provide a framework for reconciling the context dependency of the dominance of electrostatic interactions and the occurrence of n→π* orbital delocalisation in C=O⋅⋅⋅C=O interactions.
Keyphrases
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • risk assessment
  • machine learning
  • single cell
  • genome wide
  • binding protein
  • data analysis
  • protein protein