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      Mix and match recognition modules for the formation of H-bonded duplexes†

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          Abstract

          Equipping oligomeric molecules with different H-bond acceptor modules modulates the stabilities of the H-bonded duplexes formed in non-polar solvents.

          Abstract

          Oligomeric molecules equipped with complementary H-bond recognition sites form stable duplexes in non-polar solvents. The use of a single H-bond between a good H-bond donor and a good H-bond acceptor as the recognition motif appended to a non-polar backbone leads to an architecture with interchangeable recognition alphabets. The interactions of three different families of H-bond acceptor oligomers (pyridine, pyridine N-oxide or phosphine oxide recognition module) with a family of H-bond donor oligomers (phenol recognition module) are compared. All three donor–acceptor combinations form stable duplexes, where the stability of the 1 : 1 complex increases with increasing numbers of recognition modules. The effective molarity for formation of intramolecular H-bonds that lead to zipping up of the duplex (EM) increases with decreasing flexibility of the recognition modules: 14 mM for the phosphine oxides which are connected to the backbone via a flexible linker; 40 mM for the pyridine N-oxides which have three fewer degrees of torsional freedom, and 80 mM for the pyridines where the geometry of the H-bond is more directional. However, the pyridine–phenol H-bond is an order of magnitude weaker than the other two types of H-bond, so overall the pyridine N-oxides form the most stable duplexes with the highest degree of cooperativity. The results show that it is possible to use different recognition motifs with the same duplex architecture, and this makes it possible to tune overall stabilities of the complexes by varying the components.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Chem Sci
          Chem Sci
          Chemical Science
          Royal Society of Chemistry
          2041-6520
          2041-6539
          1 September 2016
          7 June 2016
          : 7
          : 9
          : 5686-5691
          Affiliations
          [a ] Department of Chemistry , University of Cambridge , Lensfield Road , Cambridge CB2 1EW , UK . Email: herchelsmith.orgchem@ 123456ch.cam.ac.uk
          Article
          c6sc01884j
          10.1039/c6sc01884j
          6022071
          30034707
          1628a4a5-017b-40dc-bf84-5140a6cbf39a
          This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2016

          This article is freely available. This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence (CC BY 3.0)

          History
          : 29 April 2016
          : 24 May 2016
          Categories
          Chemistry

          Notes

          †Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: Detailed experimental procedures with spectroscopic characterization data, NMR titration protocols, titration spectra and results of fitting the data to a 1 : 1 binding isotherm. See DOI: 10.1039/c6sc01884j


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