The cyclohexyl esters of a series of carboxylic acids, RCO(2)H, spanning a range of electronegativities and quotients of steric hindrance for the R substituent (R=Me, Et, iPr, tBu, CF(3), CH(2)Cl, CHCl(2), CCl(3), CH(2)Br, CHBr(2), and CBr(3)) were prepared. Their conformational equilibria in CD(2)Cl(2) were examined by low-temperature (1)H NMR spectroscopy to study the axial or equatorial orientation of the ester functionality with respect to the adopted chair conformation of the cyclohexane ring. The ab initio and DFT geometry-optimized structures and relative free energies of the axial and equatorial conformers were also calculated at the HF/6-311G**, MP2/6-311G**, and B3LYP/6-31G** levels of theory, both in the gas phase and in solution. In the latter case, a self-consistent isodensity polarized continuum model was employed. Only by including electron correlation in the modeling calculations for the solvated molecules was it possible to obtain a reasonable correlation between DeltaG degrees (calcd) and DeltaG degrees (exp). Both the structures and the free energy differences of the axial and equatorial conformers were evaluated with respect to the factors normally influencing conformational preference, namely, 1,3-diaxial steric interactions in the axial conformer and hyperconjugation. It was assessed that hyperconjugative interactions, sigma(C-C)/sigma(C-H) and sigma*(C-O), together with a steric effect--the destabilization of the equatorial conformer with increasing bulk of the R group--were the determinant factors for the position of the conformational equilibria. Thus, because hyperconjugation is held responsible as the mitigating factor for the anomeric effect in 2-substituted, six-membered saturated heterocyclic rings, and since it is also similarly responsible, at least partly, in these monosubstituted cyclohexanes for a preferential shift towards the axial conformer, the question is therefore raised: can the anomeric effect really be construed as anomalous?
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/chem.200390155 | DOI Listing |
J Chem Inf Model
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Department of Chemistry, Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, Illinois 60616, United States.
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Department of Chemical Science and Technologies, University of Rome "Tor Vergata", Via della Ricerca Scientifica, 00133 Rome, Italy.
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Department of Chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 170 Albany Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, United States.
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December 2024
Department of Chemistry, Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, Illinois 60616, United States.
It has been challenging to determine how a ligand that binds to a receptor activates downstream signaling pathways and to predict the strength of signaling. The challenge is compounded by functional selectivity, in which a single ligand binding to a single receptor can activate multiple signaling pathways at different levels. Spectroscopic studies show that in the largest class of cell surface receptors, 7 transmembrane receptors (7TMRs), activation is associated with ligand-induced shifts in the equilibria of intracellular pocket conformations in the absence of transducer proteins.
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