4.6 Article

Voltammetric Characterization of Redox-Inactive Guest Binding to Ln(III)[15-Metallacrown-5] Hosts Based on Competition with a Redox Probe

Journal

CHEMISTRY-A EUROPEAN JOURNAL
Volume 16, Issue 23, Pages 6786-6796

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/chem.200903015

Keywords

competitive binding; cyclic voltammetry; host guest systems; metallacrowns; supramolecular chemistry

Funding

  1. NSF [CHE-0111428]

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A novel competitive binding assay was implemented to monitor the binding of a redox inactive substrate to a redox inactive metallacrown host based on its competition with ferrocene carboxylate (FcC(-)) using cyclic voltammetry (CV). First, the binding of FcC(-) to Ln(III)[15-MCCuII,N,L-pheHA-5] (Ln MC) hosts was characterized by cyclic voltammetry. It was shown that the voltammetric half wave potentials, E-1/2 shifted to more positive potentials upon the addition of LnMC. The explicit dependence of E-1/2 with the concentration of LnMC was used to determine the association constants for the complex. The FcC(-) binding strength decreased with larger central lanthanide metals in the LnMC hosts, and substantially weaker binding was observed with La-III. X-ray crystallography revealed that the hydrophobic host cavity incompletely encapsulated FcC(-) when the guest was bound to the nine-coordinate Lam, suggesting the LnMC's ligand side chains play a substantial role in guest recognition. With knowledge of the MC-FcC(-) solution thermodynamics, the binding affinity of a redox inactive guest was then assessed. Addition of sodium benzoate to a LnMC and FcC(-) mixture resulted in E-1/2 shifting back to the value observed for FcC(-) in the absence of LnMC. The association constants between benzoate and LnMC's were calculated via the competitive binding approach. Comparison with literature values suggests this novel assay is a viable method for determining association constants for host guest systems that exhibit the proper electrochemical behavior. Notably, this CV competitive binding approach does not require the preparation of a modified electrode or a tethered guest, and thus can be generalized to a number of host guest systems.

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