33 research outputs found
Controlling molecular tautomerism through supramolecular selectivity
We have isolated the stable as well as the metastable tautomers of 1-deazapurine in the solid state by exploiting principles of supramolecular selectivity in the context of cocrystal design
5-Cyanoimino-4-Oxomethylene-4,5-Dihydroimidazole and Nitrosative Guanine Deamination. A Theoretical Study of Geometries, Electronic Structures, and N-Protonation
The 5-cyanoimino-4-oxomethylene-4,5-dihydroimidazole 1 (R = H), its N1-derivatives 2 (R = Me) and 3 (R = MOM) and their cyano-N (4, 6, 8) and imino-N protonated (5, 7, 9) derivatives were studied with RHF, B3LYP, and MP2 theory. Solvation effects were estimated with the isodensity polarized continuum model (IPCM) at the MP2 level using the dielectric constant of water. Carbodiimide 10, cyanamide 12, N-cyanomethyleneimine 13, and its protonated derivatives 14 and 15 were considered for comparison as well. Adequate theoretical treatment requires the inclusion of dispersion because of the presence of intramolecular van der Waals, charge-dipole, and dipole-dipole (including H-bonding) interactions. All conformers were considered for the MOM-substituted systems, and direct consequences on the preferred site of protonation were found. The vicinal push (oxomethylene)-pull (cyanoimino) pattern of the 5-cyanoimino-4-oxomethylene-4,5-dihydroimidazoles results in the electronic structure of aromatic imidazoles with 4-acylium and 5-cyanoamido groups. The gas-phase proton affinities of 1-3 are over 30 kcal/mol higher than that for N-cyanomethyleneimine 13, and this result provides compelling evidence in support of the zwitterionic character of 1-3. Protonation enhances the push-pull interaction; the OC charge is increased from about one-half in 1-3 to about two-thirds in the protonated systems. In the gas phase, cyano-N protonation is generally preferred but imino-N protonation can compete if the R-group contains a suitable heteroatom (hydrogen-bond acceptor, Lewis base). In polar solution, however, imino-N protonation is generally preferred. Solvation has a marked consequence on the propensity for protonation. Whereas protonation is fast and exergonic in the gas phase, it is endergonic in the polar condensed phase. It is an immediate consequence of this result that the direct observation of the cations 8 and 9 should be possible in the gas phase only
Curtin–Hammett-Driven Intramolecular Cyclization of Heteroenyne–Allenes to Phenanthridine-Fused Quinazoliniminiums
Mechanistic Investigation on the Formation of 2-Halo-3-aryl-4(<i>3H</i>)-quinazoliniminium Halides from Heteroenyne-allenes: A Computational Study
Nitrosative Adenine Deamination: Facile Pyrimidine Ring-Opening in the Dediazoniation of Adeninediazonium Ion
Dediazoniation of adeninediazonium ion, 1, forms the heteroaromatic cation, 2. Ab initio studies at the CCSD(fc)/6-31G**/ /MP2(full)/6-31G** level now reveal that the cyclic cation 2 is kinetically and thermodynamically unstable with respect to the pyrimidine ring-opened cation, 3. The results suggest that 4-cyano-5-isocyano-imidazole, 4, and 4,5-dicyanoimidazole, 5, might be formed to some extent in nitrosative deaminations of adenine
Nitrosative Guanine Deamination: Ab Initio Study of Deglycation of N-Protonated 5-Cyanoimino-4-oxomethylene-4,5-dihydroimidazoles
5-Cyanoimino-4-oxomethylene-4,5-dihydroimidazoles (1) (R at N1) have been discussed as possible intermediates in nitrosative guanine deamination, which are formed by dediazoniation and deprotonation of guaninediazonium ion. The parent system 1 (R=H) and its N1 derivatives 2 (R=Me) and 3 (R=MOM) are considered here. Protonation of 1-3, respectively, may occur either at the cyano-N to form cations 4 (R=H), 6 (R=Me), and 8 (R=MOM) or at the imino-N to form cations 5 (R=H), 7 (R=Me), and 9 (R=MOM), respectively. This protonation is the first step in the acid-catalyzed water addition to form 5-cyanoimino-imidazole-4-carboxylic acid, which then leads to oxanosine. There also exists the option of a substitution reaction by water at the R group of 6-9, and this dealkylation forms N-[4-(oxomethylene)-imidazol-5-yl]-carbodiimide (10) and N-[4-(oxomethylene)-imidazol-5-yl]cyanamide (11). In the case of DNA, the R group is a deoxyribose sugar, and attack by water leads to deglycation. To explore this reaction option, the SN1 and SN2 reactions of 6-9 with water were studied at the MP2/6-31G*//RHF/6-31G* and CCSD/6-31G*//RHF/6-31G* levels, with the inclusion of implicit solvation at the IPCM(MP2/6-31G*)//RHF/6-31G* level, and the electron density distributions of tautomers 1, 10, and 11 were analyzed. The low barriers determined for the MOM transfer show that the deglycation could occur at room temperature but that the process cannot compete with water addition
5-Cyanoimino-4-oxomethylene-4,5-dihydroimidazole and Nitrosative Guanine Deamination. A Theoretical Study of Geometries, Electronic Structures, and N-Protonation<sup>†</sup>
The 5-cyanoimino-4-oxomethylene-4,5-dihydroimidazole 1 (R = H), its N1-derivatives 2 (R = Me)
and 3 (R = MOM) and their cyano-N (4, 6, 8) and imino-N protonated (5, 7, 9) derivatives were
studied with RHF, B3LYP, and MP2 theory. Solvation effects were estimated with the isodensity
polarized continuum model (IPCM) at the MP2 level using the dielectric constant of water.
Carbodiimide 10, cyanamide 12, N-cyanomethyleneimine 13, and its protonated derivatives 14
and 15 were considered for comparison as well. Adequate theoretical treatment requires the
inclusion of dispersion because of the presence of intramolecular van der Waals, charge-dipole,
and dipole-dipole (including H-bonding) interactions. All conformers were considered for the MOM-substituted systems, and direct consequences on the preferred site of protonation were found. The
vicinal push (oxomethylene)−pull (cyanoimino) pattern of the 5-cyanoimino-4-oxomethylene-4,5-dihydroimidazoles results in the electronic structure of aromatic imidazoles with 4-acylium and
5-cyanoamido groups. The gas-phase proton affinities of 1−3 are over 30 kcal/mol higher than that
for N-cyanomethyleneimine 13, and this result provides compelling evidence in support of the
zwitterionic character of 1−3. Protonation enhances the push−pull interaction; the OC charge is
increased from about one-half in 1−3 to about two-thirds in the protonated systems. In the gas
phase, cyano-N protonation is generally preferred but imino-N protonation can compete if the
R-group contains a suitable heteroatom (hydrogen-bond acceptor, Lewis base). In polar solution,
however, imino-N protonation is generally preferred. Solvation has a marked consequence on the
propensity for protonation. Whereas protonation is fast and exergonic in the gas phase, it is
endergonic in the polar condensed phase. It is an immediate consequence of this result that the
direct observation of the cations 8 and 9 should be possible in the gas phase only
Interaction of aryl tetrazolones with anions: proton transfer <i>vs.</i> hydrogen bonding
Tetrazolones 1a,b interact with HSO4−, Br−, NO3−, NCS− and Cl− through H-bonding, but undergo deprotonation with a more basic AcO− anion.</p
Nitrosative Cytosine Deamination. An Exploration of the Chemistry Emanating from Deamination with Pyrimidine Ring-opening
A discussion of nitrosative deamination of cytosine 1 is presented that argues for the formation of 6 by diazotization of 1 to cytosinediazonium ion 2 and its electrostatic complex 3, dediazoniation to 4 ↔ 5, and amide-bond cleavage to 6. The reaction channels available to 6 include hydrolytic deglycation to 3-isocyanatoacrylonitrile 7, water addition to carbamic acid 9 with the possibility for re-closure to uracil 13, water addition to carbamic acid 9, and decarboxylation to 3-aminoacrylonitrile 10. With a view to the instability of the carbamic acid 9, the carbamate models ethyl (Z)-2-cyanovinylcarbamate 14 and (Z)-2-cyano-1-tert-butylvinylcarbamate 20 were studied. Acid-catalyzed hydrolysis of 14 leads to 2-amino- carbonylphenylcarbamate 15, and its cyclization yields the benzo-fused uracil quinazoline-2,4-dione 16. In contrast to the aromatic system 14, acid-catalyzed cyclization cannot compete with oligomerization in the case of 20, and 5-tert-butyluracil 22 is accessible only with base-catalysis. It is shown that 23, the parent of 10, also easily polymerizes. The experimental results provide a rationale as to why 9, 10, and 12 would have escaped detection in in vitro studies: they would have oligomerized. In contrast to the in vitro experiments, the oligomerizations of 9, 10, or 12 clearly are not relevant in vivo because of low monomer concentrations. With the exclusion of recyclization and of oligomerization in vivo, attention thus needs to focus on (Z)-3- aminoacrylonitrile 10 as the most likely deamination product of cytosine aside from uracil
