Premium
Isomerism of Cycloserine and Its Protonated Form
Author(s) -
Fraschetti Caterina,
Filippi Antonello,
Borocci Stefano,
Steinmetz Vincent,
Speranza Maurizio
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
chempluschem
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.801
H-Index - 61
ISSN - 2192-6506
DOI - 10.1002/cplu.201400006
Subject(s) - conformational isomerism , protonation , infrared multiphoton dissociation , chemistry , proton affinity , dissociation (chemistry) , crystallography , molecule , stereochemistry , spectroscopy , ab initio , cycloserine , computational chemistry , ion , organic chemistry , physics , quantum mechanics , biochemistry , antibiotics
A comprehensive ab initio investigation has been performed on the structure and stability of the isomers of cycloserine and its protonated forms in the unsolvated state. Many conformers of cycloserine in the ketonic ( K ), enolic ( E 4 and E 2 ), and zwitterionic ( Z 7 and Z 2 ) forms have been characterized. Enols E 2 are only a few kilocalories per mole less stable than the K isomers. Enols E 4 , as well as Z 7 and Z 2 zwitterions, are several tens of kilocalories per mole less stable than K . All the above isomeric structures exhibit pronounced isoxazolidine ring puckering, which generates very rich conformeric landscapes. The relative stability of the conformers of K , E 2 , and E 4 responds essentially to a complex balance between the attractive and repulsive electrostatic interactions among their functional groups. The preferred site of protonation of cycloserine in the gas phase has been also investigated computationally and experimentally by IR multiphoton dissociation (IRMPD) spectroscopy. The most basic center of cycloserine is the N(7) nitrogen atom (proton affinity (PA)=215.3 kcal mol −1 ). Another important basic site is the O(6) oxygen atom (PA=213.0 kcal mol −1 ). Their most populated conformers have been identified by IRMPD spectroscopy. Their predominance responds to the electrostatic interactions among the functional groups of the protonated molecule.