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Anion Transport with Pnictogen Bonds in Direct Comparison with Chalcogen and Halogen Bonds
Author(s) -
Lucia M. Lee,
Maria Tsemperouli,
Amalia I. PobladorBahamonde,
Sebastian Benz,
Naomi Sakai,
Kaori Sugihara,
Stefan Matile
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of the american chemical society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.115
H-Index - 612
eISSN - 1520-5126
pISSN - 0002-7863
DOI - 10.1021/jacs.8b12554
Subject(s) - pnictogen , chemistry , chalcogen , crystallography , ion , halogen bond , halogen , organic chemistry , alkyl , physics , superconductivity , quantum mechanics
In this Communication, we introduce transmembrane anion transport with pnictogen-bonding compounds and compare their characteristics with chalcogen- and halogen-bonding analogues. Tellurium-centered chalcogen bonds are at least as active as antimony-centered pnictogen bonds, whereas iodine-centered halogen bonds are 3 orders of magnitude less active. Irregular voltage-dependent single-channel currents, high gating charges, and efficient dye leakage support for the formation of bulky, membrane-disruptive supramolecular amphiphiles due to "too strong" binding of anions to tris(perfluorophenyl)stibanes. In contrast, the chalcogen-bonding bis(perfluorophenyl)tellanes do not cause leakage and excel as carriers with nanomolar activity, with P (Cl/Na) = 10.4 for anion/cation selectivity and P (Cl/NO 3 ) = 4.5 for anion selectivity. The selectivities are lower with pnictogen-bonding carriers because their membrane-disturbing 3D structure also affects weaker binders ( P (Cl/Na) = 2.1, P (Cl/NO 3 ) = 2.5). Their 2D structure, directionality, hydrophobicity, and support from proximal anion-π interactions are suggested to contribute to the unique power of chalcogen bonds to transport anions across lipid bilayer membranes.

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