Browsing by Subject "Enantioselective indicator displacement assay"
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Item Development of optical sensing protocols for the rapid determination of enantiomeric excess in high-throughput screening(2010-05) Leung, Diana; Anslyn, Eric V., 1960-; Sessler, Jonathan L.; Stanton, John F.; Kerwin, Sean M.Asymmetric synthesis has become an important tool to prepare enantiomerically pure compounds because it avoids the wasteful discarding of the undesired enantiomer. Combinatorial libraries allow for much faster screening for new and better asymmetric catalysts/auxiliaries, but they generate a large number of samples whose enantiomeric excess (ee) cannot be determined rapidly. This bottleneck currently limits the applicability of such approaches. We propose here the use of faster optical techniques for the determination of ee using common instrumentation, such as UV-vis spectrophotometers, and circular dichroism (CD) spectrophotometers. Our methods are easily transitioned to the microwell format commonly used in parallel/combinatorial chemistry endeavors, just by using common microplate readers: this allows for an even more rapid analysis of samples and a seamless integration in a high-throughput workflow. We have shown that enantioselective indicator displacement assays can be developed to determine ee in a high-throughput fashion utilizing either a UV-vis spectrophotometer or a 96-well plate reader. Two chiral receptors and a commercial pH indicator were used to enantioselectively discriminate α-amino acids by monitoring the degree of indicator displacement. The two receptors were able to enantioselectively discriminate 13 of the 17 analyzed α-amino acids and accurately determine ee values of independent test samples with the use of ee calibration curves. Moreover, a sample of valine was synthesized through an asymmetric reaction, whose ee was then determined with our assay and compared to chiral HPLC and 1H NMR chiral shift reagent analysis, with excellent correlation. An artificial neural network was also successfully employed in the analyses, as an alternative to ee calibration curves. Both techniques consistently produced results accurate enough for preliminary determination of ee in a rapid manner, allowing for high throughput screening (HTS) of asymmetric reactions. The use of circular dichroism spectroscopy with chiral BINAP was also explored to enantioselectively discriminate α-chiral ketones. The ketones were derivatized with pyridyl hydrazines to produce hydrazones, which were then bound to enantiomerically pure [Cu(I)(BINAP)]+, forming diastereomeric complexes with differential steric interactions leading to different degrees of twist in the BINAP moiety and characteristic signatures in the CD spectrum, as a function of sample ee.Item The uses of supramolecular chemistry in synthetic methodology development(2009-05) Shabbir, Shagufta Hasnain; Anslyn, Eric V., 1960-Enantioselective indicator displacement assays (eIDAs), was transitioned to a high-throughput screening protocols, for the rapid determination of concentration and enantioselectivity (ee) of chiral diols and α-hydroxycarboxylic acid. To improve the design of our previously established receptor based on o-(N,N-dialkylaminomethyl)arylboronate scaffolds for eIDAs. The rigidity of the receptor, which pertinent from the formation of an intramolecular N-B dative bond was investigated. o-(Pyrrolidinylmethyl)phenylboronic acid its complexes with bifunctional substrates such as catechol, [alpha]-hydroxyisobutyric acid, and hydrobenzoin was studied in detail by x-ray crystallography and ¹¹B NMR. Our structural study predicts that the formation of an N-B dative bond, and/or solvolysis to afford a tetrahedral boronate anion, depends on the solvent and the complexing substrate present. To simplify the operation of eIDAs, we introduced an analytical method, which utilize a dual-chamber quartz cuvette, which reduces the number of spectroscopic measurements from two to one and introduced artificial neural networks (ANNs) which simplifies data analysis. In a second example a high-throughtput screening protocol for hydrobenzoin was developed. The method involves the sequential utilization of what we define herein as screening, training, and analysis plates. Several enantioselective boronic-acid based receptors were screened using 96-well plates, both for their ability to discriminate the enantiomers of hydrobenzoin and to find their optimal pairing with indicators resulting in the largest optical responses. The best receptor/indicator combination was then used to train an ANN to determine concentration and ee. To prove the practicality of the developed protocol, analysis plates were created containing true unknown samples of hydrobenzoin generated by established Sharpless asymmetric dihydroxylation reactions, and the best ligand was correctly identified. The system was extended to pattern recognition for the rapid determination of identity, concentration, and ee of chiral vicinal diols. A diverse enantioselective sensor array was generated with three chiral boronic acid receptors and pH indicators. The optical response produced by the sensor array, was analyzed by two pattern recognition algorithms: principal component analysis (PCA) and ANNs. The PCA plot demonstrated good chemoselective and enantioselective separation of the analytes, and ANNs was used to accurately determine the concentration and ee of five unknown samples.