A Crystalline Dimeric Steroidal Diboronate with Electronically Impeded Rotation.
Josué Vazquez-ChavezFátima C Martínez-TorresArmando Navarro-HuertaMarcos Flores-AlamoMauricio Maldonado-DomínguezJan BlahutJakub Radek ŠtočekMartin DračínskýBraulio Rodríguez-MolinaMartin A Iglesias-ArteagaPublished in: The Journal of organic chemistry (2022)
The dimeric steroid SMR-3 , featuring a 1,4-phenyldiboronic ester flanked by two pregnan-triol frameworks, was synthesized to explore the intramolecular dynamics of its central component. The structural data from single-crystal X-ray diffraction studies and the Hirshfeld analyses indicate small steric effects around the aromatic ring that should favor the intended motion. However, solid-state NMR data obtained through VT 13 C{ 1 H } CPMAS and 2 H spin-echo experiments, using the deuterated analogue SMR-3D 4 , revealed that this component is rigid even at temperatures where other reported steroidal molecular rotors experience fast rotation (85 °C). A combination of classical molecular dynamics, molecular mechanics, and correlated ab initio calculations allowed us to distinguish the steric and electronic factors that restrict the potential motion in this compound. The experimental and computational data reveal that electronic components dominate the behavior and are responsible for the high rotational barrier in the SMR-3 crystal.
Keyphrases
- solid state
- molecular dynamics
- density functional theory
- electronic health record
- big data
- magnetic resonance
- high resolution
- crystal structure
- single cell
- single molecule
- anti inflammatory drugs
- room temperature
- data analysis
- molecular dynamics simulations
- genome wide
- high speed
- risk assessment
- artificial intelligence
- human health
- climate change
- energy transfer