The diverse structures of DNA serve as potent chiral scaffolds for DNA-based asymmetric catalysis, yet in most cases tens to hundreds of nucleotides in DNA hybrid catalysts hinder the deep insight into their structure-activity relationship. Owing to the structural simplicity and design flexibility of nucleotides, nucleotide-based catalysts have been emerging as a promising way to obtain fine structural information and understand the catalytic mechanisms. Herein, we found that a cyclic dinucleotide of cyclic di-AMP (c-di-AMP) and 1,10-phenanthroline copper(II) nitrate (Cu(phen)(NO)) are assembled to a c-di-AMP-based catalyst (c-di-AMP/Cu(phen)(NO)), which could fast achieve enantioselective fluorination in water with 90-99% yields and up to 90% enantiomeric excess (ee).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNatural biomolecules have been used extensively as chiral scaffolds that bind/surround metal complexes to achieve stereoselectivity in catalytic reactions. ATP is ubiquitously found in nature as an energy-storing molecule and can complex diverse metal cations. However, in biotic reactions ATP-metal complexes are thought to function mostly as co-substrates undergoing phosphoanhydride bond cleavage reactions rather than participating in catalytic mechanisms.
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