Issue 25, 2020

Allosteric regulation of rotational, optical and catalytic properties within multicomponent machinery

Abstract

The reversible transformation of multicomponent nanorotors (ROT-1, k298 = 44 kHz or ROT-2, k298 = 61 kHz) to the “dimeric” supramolecular structures (DS-1 or DS-2, k298 = 0.60 kHz) was triggered by a stoichiometric chemical stimulus. Simple coordination changes at the central phenanthroline of the molecular device by altering metal ions (Cu+ → Zn2+) or stoichiometry (Cu+, 1 equiv. → 0.5 equiv.) affected the terminal zinc(II) porphyrin units, the active sites within the machinery, changing rotational, catalytic and optical properties. In presence of added pyrrolidine, the nanorotor ROT-1 was inactive for catalysis whereas formation of the dimeric supramolecular structures DS-1 initiated a Michael addition reaction by releasing the organocatalyst from the porphyrin sites. This catalytic machinery (ROT-1DS-1) proved to reproducibly work over two full cycles using allosteric OFF/ON control of catalysis.

Graphical abstract: Allosteric regulation of rotational, optical and catalytic properties within multicomponent machinery

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
01 Jun 2020
Accepted
09 Jun 2020
First published
18 Jun 2020
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Dalton Trans., 2020,49, 8693-8700

Allosteric regulation of rotational, optical and catalytic properties within multicomponent machinery

S. Saha, A. Ghosh, T. Paululat and M. Schmittel, Dalton Trans., 2020, 49, 8693 DOI: 10.1039/D0DT01961E

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