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Stereoselective Assembly of Hydrogen-Bonded Anionic Cages Dictated by Organophosphate-Based Chiral Nodes.

Wei ZuoYu TaoZhipeng LuoAnyang LiShanshan WangXinrui QiaoFen MaChuandong Jia
Published in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2023)
Inspired by the signal transduction function of organophosphates in biological systems, bioactive organophosphates were utilized for the first time as chiral nodes to dictate the stereoselective assembly of hydrogen-bonded anionic cages. Phosphonomycin (antibiotics), tenofovir (antivirals), adenosine monophosphate (natural product, AMP) and clindamycin phosphate (antibiotics) were assembled with an achiral bis-monourea ligand, thereby leading to the stereoselective formation of quadruple or triple helicates. The extent of the stereoselectivity could be enhanced by either lowering the temperature or adding stronger-binding cations as templates. With the chiral anionic cages as the host, some enantioselectivity was achieved when binding chiral quaternary ammonium cations.
Keyphrases
  • ionic liquid
  • capillary electrophoresis
  • protein kinase
  • helicobacter pylori
  • sentinel lymph node
  • dna binding
  • mass spectrometry
  • antiretroviral therapy
  • lymph node