Methonium (N(+)Me3) is an organic cation widely distributed in biological systems. As an organic cation, the binding of methonium to protein receptors requires the removal of a positive charge from water. The appearance of methonium in biological transmitters and receptors seems at odds with the large unfavorable desolvation free energy reported for tetramethylammonium (TMA(+)), a frequently utilized surrogate of methonium. Here, we report an experimental system that facilitates incremental internalization of methonium within the molecular cavity of cucurbit[7]uril (CB[7]). Using a combination of experimental and computational studies, we show that the transfer of methonium from bulk water (partially solvated methonium state) to the CB[7] cavity (mostly desolvated methonium state) is accompanied by a remarkably small desolvation enthalpy of just 0.5 ± 0.3 kcal·mol(-1), a value significantly less endothermic than those values suggested from gas-phase model studies. Our results are in accord with neutron scattering measurements that suggest methonium produces only a minimal perturbation in the bulk water structure, which highlights the limitations of gas-phase models. More surprisingly, the incremental withdrawal of the methonium surface from water produces a nonmonotonic response in desolvation enthalpy. A partially desolvated state exists, in which a portion of the methonium group remains exposed to solvent. This structure incurs an increased enthalpic penalty of ~3 kcal·mol(-1) compared to other solvation states. We attribute this observation to the pre-encapsulation dewetting of the methonium surface. Together, our results offer a rationale for the wide distribution of methonium in a biological context and suggest limitations to computational estimates of binding affinities based on simple parametrization of solvent-accessible surface area.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/ja311327v | DOI Listing |
Chemistry
November 2024
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Maryland, College Park, College Park, Maryland, 20742, United States.
We report the synthesis and characterization of sulfated pillar[5]arene hosts (P5S-P5S) that differ in the number of sulfate substituents. All five P5S hosts display high solubility in water (73-131 mM) and do not undergo significant self-association according to H NMR dilution experiments. The x-ray crystal structures of P5S, P5S ⋅ MeHDA, P5S ⋅ MeHDA, and P5S ⋅ MeHDA reveal one intracavity molecule of MeHDA and several external molecules of MeHDA which form a network of close methonium ⋅ ⋅ ⋅ sulfate interactions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: To observe and analyze the performance of forensic science in the cases of suxa- methonium chloride poisoning, and to improve the identification of suxamethonium chloride poisoning.
Methods: Fifty-four cases of suxamethonium chloride poisoning were collected. The rules of determination of suxamethonium chloride poisoning were observed by the retrospective analysis of pathological and toxicological changes as well as case features.
J Am Chem Soc
February 2016
Loker Hydrocarbon Research Institute and Department of Chemistry, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California 90089-1661, United States.
Astrophysically observed extraterrestrial molecular matter contains, besides hydrogen and water, methane and methanol as the most abundant species. Feasible pathways and chemical aspects of their formation as well as of derived hydrocarbon homologues and their ions (carbocations and carbanions) are discussed on the basis of observed similarities with our studied terrestrial chemistry. The preferred pathway for converting extraterrestrial methane according to Ali et al.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Chem Phys
May 2014
Departamento de Física, Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Universidad de Buenos Aires, and IFIBA, CONICET, Ciudad Universitaria, 1428, Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Two-electron three-center bonding interactions in organic ions like methonium (CH5(+)), ethonium (C2H7(+)), and protonated alkanes n - C4H11(+) isomers (butonium cations) are described and characterized within the theoretical framework of the topological analysis of the electron density decomposition into its effectively paired and unpaired contributions. These interactions manifest in some of this type of systems as a concentration of unpaired electron cloud around the bond paths, in contrast to the well known paradigmatic boron hydrids in which it is not only concentrated close to the atomic nucleus and the bond paths but out of them and over the region defined by the involved atoms as a whole. This result permits to propose an attempt of classification for these interactions based in such manifestations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Chem Soc
April 2013
Department of Biochemistry, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina 27710, USA.
Methonium (N(+)Me3) is an organic cation widely distributed in biological systems. As an organic cation, the binding of methonium to protein receptors requires the removal of a positive charge from water. The appearance of methonium in biological transmitters and receptors seems at odds with the large unfavorable desolvation free energy reported for tetramethylammonium (TMA(+)), a frequently utilized surrogate of methonium.
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