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期刊名称:Chirality
期刊ISSN:0899-0042
期刊官方网站:http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1002/(ISSN)1520-636X
出版商:Wiley-Liss Inc.
出版周期:Monthly
影响因子:2.183
始发年份:1989
年文章数:134
是否OA:否
Stereoselective study of fluoxetine and norfluoxetine across the blood–brain barrier mediated by organic cation transporter 1/3 in rats using an enantioselective UPLC-MS/MS method
Chirality ( IF 2.183 ) Pub Date : 2023-07-18 , DOI: 10.1002/chir.23613
HaiAn,JinjunFang,MinWang,HaiyangLin,YingyingSun,BingyingHu,ZhishengHe,ZhenGe,YangWei
Fluoxetine (FLT) is a widely used antidepressant in clinical practice, which can be metabolized into active norfluoxetine (NFLT) in vivo. The stereoselectivity of FLT and NFLT enantiomers across the blood–brain barrier (BBB) is still to be clarified. In this study, accurate and reliable UPLC-MS/MS enantioselective analysis was established in rat plasma and brain. The characteristics of FLT and NFLT enantiomers across the BBB were studied by chemical knockout of rat transporters. We found that the dominant enantiomers of FLT and NFLT were S-FLT and R-NFLT, respectively, both in plasma and in brain. The FLT and NFLT enantiomers showed significant stereoselectivity across the BBB, and S-FLT and S-NFLT were the dominant configurations across the BBB. Chemical knockout of organic cation transporter 1 (OCT1) and OCT3 can affect the ratio of plasma FLT and NFLT enantiomers into the brain, suggesting that OCT1/3 is stereoselective for FLT and NFLT transport across the BBB.
Triggering gel-sol transition by weak magnetic field
Chirality ( IF 2.183 ) Pub Date : 2023-07-15 , DOI: 10.1002/chir.23602
SergeyVStovbun,AnatolyMZanin,AlekseyASkoblin,MariyaGMikhaleva,DmitryAKuznetsov,DmitryVZlenko
The self-assembly of small and always chiral molecules into fiber-like structures is a mysterious process, as the physics underlying such self-assembly is unclear. The energy necessary for this process exceeds the one provided by common dispersion interactions and hydrogen bonding. The recent results obtained by the scientific group of Prof. Naaman from the Weizmann Institute of Science fed light on the nature of forces providing for the self-assembly of chiral molecules and attributed these forces to spin-exchange interactions. Therefore, the self-assembly of chiral molecules should be magneto-sensitive. We found such sensitivity in solutions of trifluoroacetylated α $$ \alpha $$ -amino alcohols, and the process was inhibited by the magnetic field when fibers grew on the surface of the substrate. On the contrary, in bulk, the self-assembly was enhanced by the magnetic field and led to the formation of a dense gel, while no gelation was observed in the absence of the external magnetic field. The latter observations are the theme of this short report, aimed to declare the effect itself but not pretend to describe it in full.
Enantioselective binding of carvedilol to human serum albumin and alpha-1-acid glycoprotein
Chirality ( IF 2.183 ) Pub Date : 2023-05-23 , DOI: 10.1002/chir.23595
Camelia-MariaToma,SilviaImre,LenardFarczadi,ValentinIon,GabrielMarc
Carvedilol, a highly protein-bound beta-blocker, is used in therapy as a racemic mixture of its two enantiomers that exhibit different pharmacological activity. The aim of this study was to evaluate the stereoselective nature of its binding to the two major plasma proteins: albumin and alpha-1-acid glycoprotein. The determination of the plasma protein-binding degree for carvedilol and its enantiomers was achieved using ultrafiltration for the separation of the free fraction, followed by LC-MS/MS quantification, using two different developed and validated methods in terms of stationary phase: achiral C18 type and chiral ovomucoid type. Furthermore, molecular docking methods were applied in order to investigate and to better understand the mechanism of protein-binding for S-(−)- and R-(+)-carvedilol. A difference in the binding behavior of the two enantiomers to the plasma proteins was observed when taken individually, with R-(+)-carvedilol having a higher affinity for albumin and S-(−)-carvedilol for alpha-1-acid glycoprotein. However, in the case of the racemic mixture, the binding of the S enantiomer to alpha-1-acid glycoprotein seemed to be influenced by the presence of its antipode, although no such influence was observed in the case of albumin. The results raise the question of a binding competition between the two enantiomers for alpha-1-acid glycoprotein.
Tuning the photophysical and chiroptical properties of [4]helicene-diketopyrrolopyrroles
Chirality ( IF 2.183 ) Pub Date : 2023-05-19 , DOI: 10.1002/chir.23593
MaurizioMastropasquaTalamo,ThomasCauchy,FrancescoZinna,FlaviaPop,NarcisAvarvari
Synthesis and functionalization of diketopyrrolo[3,4-c]pyrrole (DPP) derivatives containing chiral groups able to induce a strong chiral perturbation of the DPP core are still a challenging task. We report in this work the straightforward preparation of four bis([4]helicene)-DPP and bis([4]thiahelicene)-DPP dyes upon the condensation of 2-CN-[4](thia)helicene precursors, followed by their N-alkylation by nucleophilic substitution (compounds 9–11) or by a Mitsunobu-type strategy (compound 12). Compound 12, which contains sec-phenylethyl groups attached to the nitrogen atoms, has been obtained as (R,R) and (S,S) enantiomers. The four DPP-helicenes are luminescent in solution, while the N-benzyl (10) and N-sec-phenethyl (12) are emissive in the solid state as well. The chiroptical properties of compound 12 in solution and in the solid state indicate a strong chiral perturbation provided by the α-stereogenic centres, in spite of the stereodynamic nature of the [4]helicene flanking units.
Fundamental symmetry origins in the chiral interactions of optical vortices
Chirality ( IF 2.183 ) Pub Date : 2023-07-05 , DOI: 10.1002/chir.23604
DavidLAndrews
Recently, a variety of mechanisms have been discovered that extend the range of optical techniques for identifying and characterizing molecular chirality, beyond those associated with optical polarization. It is now evident that beams of light with a twisted wavefront, known as optical vortices, can also interact with chiral matter with a specificity determined by relative handedness. Exploring this chiral sensitivity of vortex light in its interactions with matter requires careful consideration of the symmetry properties that engage in such processes. Most of the familiar measures of chirality are directly applicable to either matter, or to light itself—but only to one or the other. To elicit the principles that determine the viability of distinctly optical vortex-based forms of chiral discrimination invites a more universal approach to symmetry analysis, as is afforded by the common, fundamental physics of CPT $$ \mathcal{CPT} $$ symmetry. Taking this approach supports a comprehensive and straightforward analysis to identify the mechanistic origins of vortex chiroptical interactions. Careful inspection of selection rules for absorption also elicits the principles governing any identifiable engagement with vortex structures, providing a reliable basis to ascertain the viability of other forms of enantioselective vortex interaction.
Enantiomeric discrimination by chiral electromagnetic resonance enhancement
Chirality ( IF 2.183 ) Pub Date : 2023-05-04 , DOI: 10.1002/chir.23578
PrashantKumar,AlexanderSimon,NicholasAKotov
Circularly polarized light interacts preferentially with the biomolecules to generate spectral fingerprints reflecting their primary and secondary structure in the ultraviolet region of the electromagnetic spectrum. The spectral features can be transferred to the visible and near-infrared regions by coupling the biomolecules with plasmonic assemblies made of noble metals. Nanoscale gold tetrahelices were used to detect the presence of chiral objects that are 40 times smaller in size by using plane-polarized light of 550 nm wavelength. The emergence of chiral hotspots in the gaps between 80 nm long tetrahelices differentiate between weakly scattering S- vs R-molecules with optical constants similar to that of organic solvents. Simulations map the spatial distribution of the scattered field to reveal enantiomeric discrimination with selectivity up to 0.54.
Cannabicitran: Its unexpected racemic nature and potential origins
Chirality ( IF 2.183 ) Pub Date : 2023-05-04 , DOI: 10.1002/chir.23571
JaredSWood,WilliamHGordon,JeremyBMorgan,RThomasWilliamson
Cannabicitran is a cannabinoid found in levels up to ~10% in commercial “purified” cannabidiol (CBD) extracts. The structure of this natural product was first reported more than 50 years ago. However, few studies have investigated cannabicitran or its origin despite the rapidly increasing interest in the use of cannabinoids for the treatment of a wide range of physiological conditions. Following on a recent detailed NMR and computational characterization of cannabicitran, our group initiated ECD and TDDFT studies aimed at unequivocally determining the absolute configuration of cannabicitran present in Cannabis sativa extracts. To our surprise, we discovered the natural product was racemic, raising questions around its presumed enzymatic origin. Herein, we report the isolation and absolute configuration of (−)-cannabicitran and (+)-cannabicitran. Several possible scenarios for production of the racemate in the plant and/or during extract processing are discussed.
Circular dichroism of molecular aggregates: A tutorial
Chirality ( IF 2.183 ) Pub Date : 2023-03-29 , DOI: 10.1002/chir.23565
FrancescoBertocchi,CristinaSissa,AnnaPainelli
In this tutorial, we guide the reader through two alternative approaches to the calculation of circular dichroism (CD) spectra of chiral supramolecular assemblies of non-chiral chromophores. The two seemingly different approaches rely on the same basic approximations and are therefore expected to lead to similar results. For a dimer, we obtain explicit analytic expressions for the CD responses in the two approaches and demonstrate the perfect equivalence of the two methods. Numerical results for larger systems further validate this result. We hope that this tutorial will help young students and scientists entering the field to approach the fascinating topic of supramolecular chirality.
Chiral H-aggregation-induced large stokes shift with CPL generation assisted by α-helical poly(L-lysine) substructure
Chirality ( IF 2.183 ) Pub Date : 2023-03-21 , DOI: 10.1002/chir.23553
KyoheiYoshida,YutakaKuwahara,NanamiHano,YumiHorie,MakotoTakafuji,NaoyaRyu,ShojiNagaoka,ReikoOda,HirotakaIhara
Fluorescent materials with large Stokes shifts have significant potential for use in optical applications. Typically, a synthetic design strategy is utilized for this purpose. In this study, we demonstrated a novel method by binding a chiral template to a nonchiral fluorescent agent without chemical modification. Specifically, α-helical poly(L-lysine) was employed as the chiral template, which interacted with a disulfonic fluorescent dye, such as NK2751. The dye caused excimer luminescence by inducing the formation of a chirally H-aggregated dimer only when poly(L-lysine) was in an α-helical shape. The result was a Stokes shift of 230 nm. Similar effects were not observed when the chiral template was in a random coil condition and the Stokes shift was less than 40 nm. These findings imply that H-aggregated dimerization, which often results in quenching, permits the electronic transitions necessary for fluorescence events by the formation of the chirally twisted state. In addition, we introduce for the first time the generation of circularly polarized luminescence using the chirality induction phenomena in a dye supported by poly(L-lysine).
Asymmetric catalysis by flavin-dependent halogenases
Chirality ( IF 2.183 ) Pub Date : 2023-03-14 , DOI: 10.1002/chir.23550
YuhuaJiang,JaredCLewis
In nature, flavin-dependent halogenases (FDHs) catalyze site-selective chlorination and bromination of aromatic natural products. This ability has led to extensive efforts to engineer FDHs for selective chlorination, bromination, and iodination of electron rich aromatic compounds. On the other hand, FDHs are unique among halogenases and haloperoxidases that exhibit catalyst-controlled site selectivity in that no examples of enantioselective FDH catalysis in natural product biosynthesis have been characterized. Over the past several years, our group has established that FDHs can catalyze enantioselective reactions involving desymmetrization, atroposelective halogenation, and halocyclization. Achieving high activity and selectivity for these reactions has required extensive mutagenesis and mitigation of problems resulting from hypohalous acid generated during FDH catalysis. The single-component flavin reductase/FDH AetF is unique among the wild type enzyme we have studied in that it provides high activity and selectivity toward several asymmetric transformations. These results highlight the ability of FDH active sites to tolerate different substrate topologies and suggest that they could be useful for a broad range of oxidative halogenations.
Chiral diketopyrrolo[3,4-c]pyrrole-based oligothiophenes: Synthesis and characterization of aggregated states in solution and thin films
Chirality ( IF 2.183 ) Pub Date : 2023-07-09 , DOI: 10.1002/chir.23608
GianluigiAlbano,LauraAntonellaAronica,GennaroPescitelli,LorenzoDiBari
In this work, we synthesized a family of three structurally related chiral oligothiophenes containing a 1,4-diketo-3,6-diarylpyrrolo[3,4-c]pyrrole (DPP) unit as the central core; functionalized with the same (S)-3,7-dimethyl-1-octyl chains on the nitrogen atoms of lactam moieties, they only differ in the number of lateral thiophene units. The aggregation modes of these π-conjugated chiral systems were evaluated by means of UV–Vis absorption and ECD spectroscopies in conditions of solution aggregation (CHCl3/MeOH mixtures) and as thin films, describing in particular the impact of the π-conjugation length on the chiroptical properties. Interestingly, we found that the variable number of thiophene units attached to the DPP core affects not only the propensity to aggregation but also the aggregates' helicity. ECD revealed information about the supramolecular arrangement of these molecules, that one would not obtain by using conventional optical spectroscopy and microscopy techniques. Thin film samples revealed very different aggregation modes with respect to solution aggregates, casting doubts on the common assumption that these latter may serve as simple models of the former ones.
Isolated and solvated chiroptical behavior in conformationally flexible butanamines
Chirality ( IF 2.183 ) Pub Date : 2023-06-13 , DOI: 10.1002/chir.23570
PaulM.Lemler,ClaytonL.Craft,CorinaH.Pollok,ThomasP.Regan,PatrickH.Vaccaro
The nonresonant optical activity of two highly flexible aliphatic amines, (2R)-3-methyl-2-butanamine (R-MBA) and (2R)-(3,3)-dimethyl-2-butanamine (R-DMBA), has been probed under isolated and solvated conditions to examine the roles of conformational isomerism and to explore the influence of extrinsic perturbations. The optical rotatory dispersion (ORD) measured in six solvents presented uniformly negative rotatory powers over the 320–590 nm region, with the long-wavelength magnitude of chiroptical response growing nearly monotonically as the dielectric constant of the surroundings diminished. The intrinsic specific optical rotation, α λ T $$ {\left[\alpha \right]}_{\lambda}^T $$ (in deg dm−1 [g/mL]−1), extracted for ambient vapor-phase samples of R-MBA [−11.031(98) and −2.29 (11)] and R-DMBA [−9.434 (72) and −1.350 (48)] at 355 and 633 nm were best reproduced by counterintuitive solvents of high polarity (yet low polarizability) like acetonitrile and methanol. Attempts to interpret observed spectral signatures quantitatively relied on the linear-response frameworks of density-functional theory (B3LYP, cam-B3LYP, and dispersion-corrected analogs) and coupled-cluster theory (CCSD), with variants of the polarizable continuum model (PCM) deployed to account for the effects of implicit solvation. Building on the identification of several low-lying equilibrium geometries (nine for R-MBA and three for R-DMBA), ensemble-averaged ORD profiles were calculated at T = 300 K by means of the independent-conformer ansatz, which enabled response properties predicted for the optimized structure of each isomer to be combined through Boltzmann-weighted population fractions derived from corresponding relative internal-energy or free-energy values, the latter of which stemmed from composite CBS-APNO and G4 analyses. Although reasonable accord between theory and experiment was realized for the isolated (vapor-phase) species, the solution-phase results were less satisfactory and tended to degrade progressively as the solvent polarity increased. These trends were attributed to solvent-mediated changes in structural parameters and energy metrics for the transition states that separate and putatively isolate the equilibrium conformations supported by the ground electronic potential-energy surface, with the resulting displacement of barrier locations and/or decrease of barrier heights compromising the underlying premise of the independent-conformer ansatz.
Enantioselective voltammetric sensor based on mesoporous graphitized carbon black Carbopack X and fulvene derivative
Chirality ( IF 2.183 ) Pub Date : 2023-03-23 , DOI: 10.1002/chir.23563
YuliaYarkaeva,MaratNazyrov,YaroslavAbdullin,PavelKovyazin,ValeryMaistrenko
For medicine and pharmaceuticals, the problem of determining and recognizing the enantiomers of biologically active compounds is an actual issue because the enantiomers of the same substance can have different effects on living organisms. This paper describes the development of an enantioselective voltammetric sensor (EVS) based on a glassy carbon electrode (GCE) modified with mesoporous graphitized carbon black Carbopack X (CpX) and a fulvene derivative (1S,4R)-2-cyclopenta-2,4-dien-1-ylidene-1-isopropyl-4-methylcyclohexane (CpIPMC) for recognition and determination of tryptophan (Trp) enantiomers. Synthesized CpIPMC was characterized by 1H and 13C nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), chromatography–mass spectrometry, and polarimetry. The proposed sensor platform was studied by Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), scanning electron microscopy (SEM), cyclic voltammetry (CV), and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS). Using the square-wave voltammetry (SWV), it was established that the developed sensor is an effective chiral platform for the quantitative determination of Trp enantiomers, including in a mixture and in biological fluids like urine and blood plasma, with adequate precision and recovery ranged from 96% to 101%.
Continuous chiral distances for two-dimensional lattices
Chirality ( IF 2.183 ) Pub Date : 2023-06-21 , DOI: 10.1002/chir.23598
MatthewJBright,AndrewICooper,VitaliyAKurlin
Chirality was traditionally considered a binary property of periodic lattices and crystals. However, the classes of two-dimensional lattices modulo rigid motion form a continuous space, which was recently parametrized by three geographic-style coordinates. The four non-oblique Bravais classes of two-dimensional lattices form low-dimensional singular subspaces in the full continuous space. Now, the deviations of a lattice from its higher symmetry neighbors can be continuously quantified by real-valued distances satisfying metric axioms. This article analyzes these and newer G-chiral distances for millions of two-dimensional lattices that are extracted from thousands of available two-dimensional materials and real crystal structures in the Cambridge Structural Database.
Valbenazine isomers and enantiomer determination by chiral normal phase liquid chromatography
Chirality ( IF 2.183 ) Pub Date : 2023-06-21 , DOI: 10.1002/chir.23600
BalasahebRDeshmukh,ParameswariAkshinthala,NareshKumarKatari,LeelaPrasadKowtharapu,GirishKDeshpande,SreenivasRaoBattula,RambabuGundla
A novel, simple, specific, rapid, enantioselective normal phase chiral high-performance liquid chromatographic method with amylose-based Chiral Pak IG-3(250 × 4.6 mM) 3.0 μM column was developed and validated for separation and quantification of isomers and enantiomer of Valbenazine. The mobile phase composed of n-Heptane, isopropyl alcohol, dichloromethane, ethanol, and diethylamine in the ratio of 70:10:15:5:0.1 (V/V/V/VV) with a gradient flow rate was applied. The injection volume was 10 μl, and detection was carried out using a photodiode array detector at 282 nM. The column compartment was set at 35°C. The resolution between the enantiomer and isomers was found to be more than 2.0. The method was linear over the concentration range of limit of quantitation to 250% for isomers and enantiomers. The method was found to be robust with column temperature. The proposed chiral method is applicable for the determination of isomers and enantiomer of Valibenazine and was successfully used in the quality control of bulk drug manufacturing and pharmaceuticals.
Stereoselective behaviors and enantiomeric effects of paclobutrazol on microorganisms during Chinese cabbage pickling process
Chirality ( IF 2.183 ) Pub Date : 2023-03-16 , DOI: 10.1002/chir.23549
MinChen,Hao-MingGuo,Shan-ShanDi,YueZhao,Dong-DongZhou,Yi-WenCao,PeiTian,Zhong-HuaYang,Hui-YuZhao
Studies on the differences between chiral pesticide enantiomers have caused widespread concern in the last decade. In the current work, the selective behaviors and different biological activities of paclobutrazol enantiomers during Chinese cabbage pickling process were evaluated. Results of degradation kinetics indicated that when paclobutrazol reside in raw material (Chinese cabbage) and was introduced into the pickling process, the degradation rates of the two paclobutrazol enantiomers were significantly different, the half-lives of (2R, 3R)-paclobutrazol (R-paclobutrazol) and (2S, 3S)-paclobutrazol (S-paclobutrazol) were 18.24 and 6.19 d, respectively. Besides, the conversion between the two enantiomers could also be observed, and the conversion rate of R-paclobutrazol to S-paclobutrazol was slower than that of reverse process. In addition, from the analysis of 16S rRNA and ITS sequencing, we inferred that the degradation of paclobutrazol was probably due to the presence of Pseudomonas and Serratia. Moreover, there has a significant difference in biological activity between R-paclobutrazol and S-paclobutrazol and shown an obviously enantiomeric effects on microbial community composition of pickling system. Besides, the analysis of microbial community displayed R-paclobutrazol might inhibit the growth of Erwinia (a sort of plant pathogens). Results from this study served to enhance our understanding of chiral pesticide residues on food safety and the potential risks to human health.
Teicoplanin aglycone media and carboxypeptidase Y: Tools for finding low-abundance D-amino acids and epimeric peptides
Chirality ( IF 2.183 ) Pub Date : 2023-03-16 , DOI: 10.1002/chir.23543
Yu-ShengSung,LiudmylaKhvalbota,UmangDhaubhadel,IvanŠpánik,DanielWArmstrong
D-amino acids and epimeric peptides/proteins can play crucial biological roles and adversely affect protein folding and oligopeptide aggregation in age-related pathologies in humans. This has ignited interest in free D-amino acids as well as those incorporated in peptides/proteins and their effects in humans. However, such stereoisomeric analytes are often elusive and in low abundance with few existing methodologies capable of scouting for and identifying them. In this work, we examine the feasibility of using teicoplanin aglycone, a macrocyclic antibiotic, which has been reported to strongly retain D-amino acids and peptides with a D-amino acid on the C-terminus, for use as a solid phase extraction (SPE) medium. The HPLC retention factors of L-/D-amino acids and C-terminus modified D-amino acid-containing peptides and their L-amino acid exclusive counterparts on teicoplanin aglycone are presented. Retention curve differences between amino acids and peptides highlight regions of solvent composition that can be utilized for their separation. This approach is particularly useful when coupled with enzymatic hydrolysis via carboxypeptidase Y to eliminate all L-amino acid exclusive peptides. The remaining peptides with carboxy-terminal D-amino acids are then more easily concentrated and identified.
The expression of chirality in linked poly(thiophene)s
Chirality ( IF 2.183 ) Pub Date : 2023-02-26 , DOI: 10.1002/chir.23548
BirgittTimmermans,JulienDeWinter,PascalGerbaux,GuyKoeckelberghs
Conjugated polymers have demonstrated to express chirality, for instance, by strong circular dichroism (CD). However, the shape and intensity of the spectra can be quite different and are very difficult to predict. Molecular irregularity, star-shapes, and linking polymers have demonstrated to affect the CD, often in a positive way. In this research, we design two different chiral arms, in which the molecular irregularity results in a significantly different CD. Next, the arms are coupled to a linear core in all possible combinations. In this way, we demonstrate that rather small irregularities and linking arms to a central core increases CD, whereas heterogenous combinations result in smaller CD.
Separation and quantitative estimation of stereo-selective enantiomers of montelukast in pharmaceutical drug substance and tablets dosage forms by using stability-indicating normal phase-HPLC method
Chirality ( IF 2.183 ) Pub Date : 2023-07-17 , DOI: 10.1002/chir.23610
NirojaVadagam,SharathBabuHaridasyam,MuvvalaVenkatanarayana,NarasimhaS.Lakka,SanjeevaR.Chinnakadoori
Montelukast sodium (MLS) is a leukotriene receptor antagonist that relieves asthma, bronchospasm, allergic rhinitis, and urticaria. A simple, robust, and stability-indicating normal phase high-performance liquid chromatography method was developed to separate and quantitatively estimate the S-enantiomer of MLS. The chiral separation was achieved using USP L51 packing material along with a mobile phase consisting of a solvent mixture (n-hexane, ethanol, and propionic acid), a flow rate of 1.0 mL/min, a detection wavelength of 284 nm, a column temperature of 30°C and an injection volume of 20 μL. The enantiomers peaks were well separated from the peaks of the placebo, diluting solvent, MLS, and its known impurities with a resolution of more than 2.2 and with no interference. Accuracy and linearity were studied in a range of 0.36–3.597 μg/mL (0.03%–0.30%), with good recoveries between 92.5% and 96.8% and a linear regression coefficient above 0.996. The suggested chiral chromatography method is being considered as an alternative and equivalent method to the United States Pharmacopeia and European Pharmacopeia monographs. The developed method was effectively employed for the study of release and stability samples of MLS. This HPLC method is also capable of separating and estimating the stereo-selective isomers (R- and S-enantiomers) of sulfoxide impurity of MLS in pharmaceutical medicine.
Infrared and vibrational circular dichroism spectra of methyl β-D-glucopyranose in water: The application of the quantum cluster growth and clusters-in-a-liquid solvation models
Chirality ( IF 2.183 ) Pub Date : 2023-05-10 , DOI: 10.1002/chir.23576
AngeloShehanPerera,ColtonDCarlson,JosephCheramy,YunjieXu
The infrared (IR) and vibrational circular dichroism (VCD) spectra of methyl β-D-glucopyranose in water were measured. Both implicit and explicit solvation models were utilized to explain the observed spectra. The vast body of existing experimental and theoretical data suggested that about eight explicit water molecules are needed to account for the solvent effects, supported by the current Quantum Cluster Growth (QCG) analysis. Extensive manual and systematic conformational searches of the molecular target and its water clusters were carried out by using a recently developed conformational searching tool, conformer-rotamer ensemble sampling tool (CREST), and the microsolvation model in the associated QCG code. The Boltzmann averaged IR and VCD spectra of the methyl β-D-glucopyranose-(water)n (n = 8) conformers in the PCM of water provide better agreement with the experimental ones than those with n = 0, 1, and 2. The explicit solvation with eight water molecules was shown to greatly modify the conformational preference of methyl β-D-glucopyranose from its monomeric form. Further analyses show that the result is consistent with the existence of long-lived methyl β-D-glucopyranose monohydrates with the additional explicit water effects being accounted for with the quantum mechanical treatment of the other seven close-by water molecules in the PCM of water.
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The main aim of the journal is to publish original contributions of scientific work on the role of chirality in chemistry and biochemistry in respect to biological, chemical, materials, pharmacological, spectroscopic and physical properties. Papers on the chemistry (physiochemical, preparative synthetic, and analytical), physics, pharmacology, clinical pharmacology, toxicology, and other biological aspects of chiral molecules will be published.Among the topics to be covered are: Asymmetric synthesis, including development and characterization of chiral catalysts and mechanistic aspectsIsolation and structural elucidation of natural productsChiroptical spectroscopies (ECD, VCD, OR, ROA, CPL, …) covering experimental, instrumental, theoretical and computational aspectsHomochirality and Spontaneous symmetry breaking in NatureTheoretical aspects of chirality phenomenon and optical activityPreparative and analytic separation of chiral molecules, including enantioselective chromatography and related techniques, liquid-liquid extractions, stereoisomer crystallizationsChiral Supramolecular chemistry and chirality on nanoscalePharmacokinetics of chiral drugs (absorption, distribution, protein binding, biotransformation, etc.)Pharmacodynamics of chiral drugs (drug-receptor interactions, pharmacological and toxicological activity)Clinical pharmacology of chiral drugs (therapeutic index and response, bioavailability, adverse drug reactions, drug-drug interactions)Regulatory and legal aspects in the development, testing, and marketing of chiral compoundsStereochemistry of pesticides and other xenobioticsIn addition to original research papers, the journal publishes brief reviews, short communications, tutorials, conference reports, and book reviews.
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