ABSTRACT
Metformin is the most prescribed drug for DM2, but its site and mechanism of action are still not well established. Here, we investigated the effects of metformin on basolateral intestinal glucose uptake (BIGU), and its consequences on hepatic glucose production (HGP). In diabetic patients and mice, the primary site of metformin action was the gut, increasing BIGU, evaluated through PET-CT. In mice and CaCo2 cells, this increase in BIGU resulted from an increase in GLUT1 and GLUT2, secondary to ATF4 and AMPK. In hyperglycemia, metformin increased the lactate (reducing pH and bicarbonate in portal vein) and acetate production in the gut, modulating liver pyruvate carboxylase, MPC1/2, and FBP1, establishing a gut-liver crosstalk that reduces HGP. In normoglycemia, metformin-induced increases in BIGU is accompanied by hypoglycemia in the portal vein, generating a counter-regulatory mechanism that avoids reductions or even increases HGP. In summary, metformin increases BIGU and through gut-liver crosstalk influences HGP.
Subject(s)
Gastrointestinal Tract , Glucose , Liver , Metformin , Animals , Humans , Mice , Caco-2 Cells , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 , Glucose/metabolism , Hypoglycemic Agents/pharmacology , Liver/metabolism , Metformin/pharmacology , Positron Emission Tomography Computed Tomography , Gastrointestinal Tract/metabolismABSTRACT
The JFH coupling constants in fluorinated amino alcohols were investigated through experimental and theoretical approaches. The experimental JFH couplings were only reproduced theoretically when explicit solvation through molecular dynamics (MD) simulations was conducted in DMSO as the solvent. The combination of MD conformation sampling and DFT NMR spin-spin coupling calculations for these compounds reveals the simultaneous presence of through-space (TS) and hydrogen bond (H-bond) assisted JFH coupling between fluorine and hydrogen of the NH group. Furthermore, MD simulations indicate that the hydrogen in the amino group participates in both an intermolecular bifurcated H-bond with DMSO and in transmitting the observed JFH coupling. The contribution of TS to the JFH coupling is due to the spatial proximity of the fluorine and the NH group, aided by a combination of the non-bonding transmission pathway and the hydrogen bonding pathway. The experimental JFH coupling observed for the molecules studied should be represented as 4TS/1hJFH coupling.
ABSTRACT
The NMR analysis of fluorine-containing molecules, increasingly widespread due to their importance in pharmaceuticals and biochemistry, poses significant challenges. Severe peak overlap in the proton spectrum often hinders the extraction of critical structural information in the form of heteronuclear scalar coupling constants, which are crucial for determining pharmaceutical properties and biological activity. Here, a new method, IPAP-FESTA, is reported that drastically simplifies measurements of the signs and magnitudes of proton-fluorine couplings. Its usefulness is demonstrated for the structural study of the steroidal drug fluticasone propionate extracted from a commercial formulation and for assessing solvent effects on the conformational equilibrium in a physically inseparable fluorohydrin mixture.
ABSTRACT
[3+2] cycloadditions of nitroolefins have emerged as a selective and catalyst-free alternative for the synthesis of 1,2,3-triazoles from azides. We describe mechanistic studies into the cycloaddition/rearomatization reaction sequence. DFT calculations revealed a rate-limiting cycloaddition step proceeding via an asynchronous TS with high kinetic selectivity for the 1,5-triazole. Kinetic studies reveal a second-order rate law, and 13 C kinetic isotopic effects at natural abundance were measured with a significant normal effect at the conjugated olefinic centers of 1.0158 and 1.0216 at the α and ß-carbons of ß-nitrostyrene. Distortion/interaction-activation strain and energy decomposition analyses revealed that the major regioisomeric pathway benefits from an earlier and less-distorted TS, while intermolecular interaction terms dominate the preference for 1,5- over 1,4-cycloadducts. In addition, the major regioisomer also has more favorable electrostatic and dispersion terms. Additionally, while static DFT calculations suggest a concerted but highly asynchronous Ei-type HNO2 elimination mechanism, quasiclassical direct-dynamics calculations reveal the existence of a dynamic intermediate.
Subject(s)
Alkenes , Azides , Kinetics , Cycloaddition Reaction , Catalysis , TriazolesABSTRACT
Long-range proton-fluorine coupling constants (n JHF ) are helpful for the structure elucidation of fluorinated molecules. However, their magnitude and sign can change with the relative position of coupled nuclei and the presence of substituents. Here, trans-4-tert-butyl-2-fluorocyclohexanone was used as a model compound for the study of the transmission of 4 JHF . In this compound, the 4 JH6axF was measured to be +5.1 Hz, which is five times larger than the remaining 4 JHF in the same molecule (4 JH4F = +1.0 Hz and 4 JH6eqF = +1.0 Hz). Through a combination of experimental data, natural bond orbital (NBO) and natural J-coupling (NJC) analyses, we observed that stereoelectronic interactions involving the π system of the carbonyl group are involved in the transmission pathway for the 4 JH6axF . Interactions containing the π system as an electron acceptor (e.g., σC6H6ax â π*CâO and σCF â π*CâO ) increase the value of the 4 JH6axF , while the interaction of the π system as an electron donor (e.g., πCâO â σ*CF ) decreases it. Additionally, the carbonyl group was shown not to be part of the transmission pathway of the diequatorial 4 JH6eqF coupling in cis-4-tert-butyl-2-fluorocyclohexanone, revealing that there is a crucial symmetry requirement that must be fulfilled for the π system to influence the value of the 4 JHF in these systems.
Subject(s)
Fluorine , Fluorine/chemistryABSTRACT
Halogens cause pronounced and systematic effects on the 13C NMR chemical shift (δ13C) of an adjacent carbon nucleus, usually leading to a decrease in the values across the halogen series. Although this normal halogen dependence (NHD) is known in organic and inorganic compounds containing the carbon atom in its neutral and cationic forms, information about carbanions is scarce. To understand how δ13C changes in molecules with different charges, the shielding mechanisms of CHX3, CX3+, and CX3- (X = Cl, Br, or I) systems are investigated via density functional theory calculations and further analyzed by decomposition into contributions of natural localized molecular orbitals. An inverse halogen dependence (IHD) is determined for the anion series as a result of the negative spin-orbit contribution instead of scalar paramagnetic effects. The presence of a carbon nonbonding orbital in anions allows magnetic couplings that generate a deshielding effect on the nucleus and contradicts the classical association between δ13C and atomic charge.
ABSTRACT
State-of-the-art nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) selective experiments are capable of directly analyzing crude reaction mixtures. A new experiment named HD-HAPPY-FESTA yields ultrahigh-resolution total correlation subspectra, which are suitable for sign-sensitive determination of heteronuclear couplings, as demonstrated here by measuring the sign and magnitude for proton-fluorine couplings (JHF) from major and minor isomer products of a two-step reaction without any purification. Proton-fluorine couplings ranging from 51.5 to -2.6 Hz could be measured using HD-HAPPY-FESTA, with the smallest measured magnitude of 0.8 Hz. Experimental JHF values were used to identify the two fluoroketone intermediates and the four fluoroalcohol products. Results were rationalized and compared with the density functional theory (DFT) calculations. Experimental data were further compared with the couplings reported in the literature, where pure samples were analyzed.
ABSTRACT
The analysis of complex mixtures is an important but often intractable problem. When species contain sparse fluorine atoms, NMR spectra of fluorine-containing spin systems can be efficiently extracted from an intact mixture using the recently proposed FESTA (Fluorine-Edited Selective TOCSY Acquisition) methodology. Here an alternative approach to the existing selective reverse INEPT FESTA (SRI-FESTA) experiment is described, based on the use of a modulated spin echo for the initial excitation. MODO-FESTA (modulated echo FESTA) is simpler and has a significant sensitivity advantage over SRI-FESTA. Comparisons are presented of the relative sensitivity and spectral purity of the two types of methods.
ABSTRACT
The trifluoromethyl anion (CF3 - ) displays 13 C NMR chemical shift (175.0 ppm) surprisingly larger than neutral (CHF3 , 122.2 ppm) and cation (CF3 + , 150.7 ppm) compounds. This unexpected deshielding effect for a carbanion is investigated by density functional theory calculations and decomposition analyses of the 13 C shielding tensor into localized molecular orbital contributions. The present work determines the shielding mechanisms involved in the observed behaviour of the fluorinated anion species, shedding light on the experimental NMR data and demystify the classical correlation between electron density and NMR chemical shift. The presence of fluorine atoms induces the carbon lone pair to create a paramagnetic shielding on the carbon nucleus.
Subject(s)
Hydrocarbons, Fluorinated/chemistry , Anions , Carbon Isotopes , Magnetic Resonance SpectroscopyABSTRACT
The energy released when tetradecyltrimethylammonium bromide (C14TAB) is combined with different derivatives of chlorobenzoates in an isothermal titration calorimeter (ITC) allows a direct evaluation of the spontaneity of the threading of the aromatic anions into the micellar palisade. The comparison between the enthalpimetric curves with the ones for viscosity of the solutions, hydrodynamic radii of the aggregates (dynamic light scattering experiments), and the fraction of aromatic anions incorporated (diffusion-ordered spectroscopy experiments) allows the establishment of the variations of enthalpy with formation, growth, and decrease of the wormlike micelles (WLMs). The formation of WLMs with C14TAB is very favored (very exothermic) for titrations of chlorobenzoate derivatives which present the chlorine atom in positions 3 or 4 of the aromatic ring. However, the aggregation is highly unfavorable if chlorine is at position 2 of chlorobenzoate. According to the results, the high potential of the ITC to determine critical concentrations and the energies associated with the aggregation of a cationic surfactant and aromatic anions for the formation of WLMs was demonstrated.
ABSTRACT
Diffusion-ordered spectroscopy (DOSY) is arguably a powerful method for the NMR analysis of ionic liquids, since the self-diffusion coefficients for cations and anions can be measured straightforwardly. In this work, the dynamic-structural behaviour of imidazolium ionic liquids containing different anions has been investigated by experimental measurements of direct 1H diffusion coefficients in chloroform and water solutions. The influence of ion structure has been tested by using six IL salts formed by the association of different cations (1-n-butyl-3-methylimidazolium, 1,2,3-trimethylimidazolium and tetra-n-butylammonium) with different anion structures (prolinate, acetate and o-trifluoromehtylobenzoate). The influence of IL concentration (from 0.01 to 0.5 mol L-1) was also evaluated for BMI·Pro. The contact ion pairs (or aggregates) are maintained in both chloroform and water within the range of concentrations investigated. In the particular case of 1,2,3-trimethylimidazolium imidazolate (TMI·Im) containing confined water in DMSO the maintenance of the contact ion pairs depends on the water content which may even disrupt the IL supramolecular structure.
ABSTRACT
This study expands the knowledge on the conformational preference of 1,3-amino alcohols in the gas phase and in solution. By employing Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, density functional theory (DFT) calculations, quantum theory of atoms in molecules (QTAIM), natural bond orbital (NBO) analysis, and molecular dynamics (MD), the compounds 3-aminopropan-1-ol (1), 3-methylaminopropan-1-ol (2), and 3-dimethylaminopropan-1-ol (3) are evaluated. The results show that the most stable conformation of each compound in the gas phase and in nonpolar solvents exhibited an O-H···N intramolecular hydrogen bond (IHB). Based on the experimental and theoretical OH-stretching frequencies, the IHB becomes stronger from 1 to 3. In addition, from the experimental NMR J-couplings, the IHB conformers are predominant in nonbasic solvents, representing 70-80% of the conformational equilibrium, while in basic solvents, such conformers only represent 10%. DFT calculations and QTAIM analysis in the gas phase support the occurrence of IHBs in these compounds. The MD simulation indicates that the non-hydrogen-bonded conformers are the lowest energy conformations in the solution because of molecular interactions with the solvent, while they are absent in the implicit solvation model based on density. NBO analysis suggests that methyl groups attached on the nitrogen atom affect the charge transfer energy involved in the IHB. This effect occurs mostly because of a decrease in the s-character of the LPN orbital along with weakening of the charge transfer from LPN to σ*OH, which is caused by an increase in the C-C-N bond angle.
ABSTRACT
In complex mixtures, proton nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectra are often very crowded, making spectral analysis complicated or even impossible, particularly when detailed structural information about the mixture components is needed. A new 1D NMR method (fluorine-edited selective TOCSY acquisition, FESTA) is introduced that facilitates the structural analysis of mixtures of species that contain fluorine. It allows simplified 1H spectra to be obtained that show only those protons that are in a spin system coupled to fluorine of interest. The new method is illustrated by factorizing a complex 1H spectrum into subspectra for individual spin systems involving different 19F sites.
ABSTRACT
The long-range scalar coupling constant between proton and fluorine nuclei, 5 JHF , is observed to be larger than 3 JHF in the pyrimidinyl moiety of voriconazole. A set of smaller molecules is chosen (fluorobenzene, N-methyl-2-fluoropyridine, N-methyl-3-fluoropyridine, 3-fluoropyridine, 5-pyrimidine, and 2-fluoropyridine) to evaluate the influence of the nitrogen atom in the experimental JHF values. Spectral aliased pure shift heteronuclear single quantum coherence spectroscopy (SAPS-HSQC) is applied to determine the relative sign between the JCF and JHF scalar couplings. Theoretical calculations show that the 3 JHF and 5 JHF coupling constants can be described mainly by a Fermi contact (FC) transmission mechanism. A decomposition analysis of JHF in terms of localized molecular orbital (LMO) contributions allows us to determine that the interaction involving the nitrogen lone pair (LPN) is the main reason for the larger 5 JHF compared to 3 JHF . Our analysis indicates that delocalization of LPN has a positive contribution to the long-range coupling, while a negative one is observed for 3 JHF .
ABSTRACT
Unusual 1 JCH values for an oxocane derivative were recently reported, highlighting the unexpected long-range Perlin effect for the 1 JCH. According to our theoretical and experimental results listed in this paper, the previous published data cannot be supported. Moreover, when comparing the previously studied oxocane derivative with analogous molecules, we realized that the difference between J-couplings actually comes from the increase in the 1 JC-Hax instead of decreasing of 1 JC-Heq, as suggested.
ABSTRACT
Recent research [Chem. Sci., 2017, 8, 6570-6576] showed for R-substituted benzenes with R = NH2, NO2 that the substitution effects on the 13C NMR chemical shifts are correlated with changes in the σ-bonding framework and do not follow directly the electron-donating or -withdrawing effects on the π orbitals. In the present work we extend the study to halogen (X = F, Cl, Br or I) substituted R-benzenes. The effect of X and R groups on 13C NMR chemical shifts in X-R-benzenes are investigated by density functional calculations and localized molecular orbital analyses. Deshielding effects caused by the X atom on the directly bonded carbon nucleus are observed for F and Cl derivatives due to a paramagnetic coupling between occupied π orbitals and unoccupied antibonding orbitals. The SO coupling plays an important role in the carbon magnetic shielding of Br and I derivatives, as is well known, and the nature of X also modulates the 13C paramagnetic shielding contributions. Overall, the X and R substituent effects are approximately additive.
ABSTRACT
The conformational preferences of proteinogenic glutamic acid esterified (GluOMe) and N-acetylated (AcGluOMe) derivatives have been determined in solution for the first time. Theoretical calculations at the ωB97X-D/aug-cc-pVTZ made possible the assignment of six and eight stable conformers for GluOMe and AcGluOMe, respectively. The conformational equilibrium of the studied compounds was evaluated in different organic solvents using a combination of the integral equation formalism polarizable continuum model (IEF-PCM) and 1H NMR spectroscopy data. The results showed that the conformational equilibrium of both derivatives change in the presence of solvent. According to the quantum theory of atoms in molecules (QTAIM), non-covalent interactions (NCI), and natural bond orbitals (NBO) analyses, the conformational preferences observed for GluOMe and AcGluOMe are not dictated by the presence of a specific interaction but are due to a combination of hyperconjugative and steric effects.
ABSTRACT
Intramolecular hydrogen bonding (IAHB) is one of the most important intramolecular interactions and a critical element in adopted molecular arrangements. Moreover, slight substitution in a molecule can affect its strength to a great extent. It is well established that alkyl groups play a positive role in IAHB strength. However, the effects that drive it are specific to each system. To investigate the influence of IAHB and its strength dependency on different acyclic compounds, the conformational preferences of propane-1,3-diol, 3-methoxypropan-1-ol, 3-ethoxypropan-1-ol, 3-isopropoxypropan-1-ol, 3-(tert-butoxy)propan-1-ol, butane-1,3-diol, 3-methoxybutan-1-ol, 3-methylbutane-1-diol, and 3-methoxy-3-methylbutan-1-ol were evaluated experimentally using infrared spectroscopy theoretically supported by topological and natural bond orbital analyses. The most stable conformation of each compound exhibited IAHB and these conformers are more populated in the equilibrium for all studied compounds. Experimental infrared and topological data suggest that the strength of IAHB increases for each methyl group addition. NBO analyses indicate that methyl groups in different positions related to an OH moiety affect the charge transfer energy involved in intramolecular hydrogen bonding. This occurs mostly due to an increase in the spn-hybridized lone pair (LP1O) contribution to the charge transfer , which is a result of changes in s-character and orbital energy caused by geometrical rearrangements, rehybridization, and/or electronic effects.
ABSTRACT
NMR is the most versatile tool for the analysis of organic compounds and, in combination with Diffusion-Ordered Spectroscopy ('DOSY'), can give information on compounds in complex mixtures without the need for physical separation. In mixtures where the components' diffusion coefficients are nearly identical, for example because of similar sizes, Matrix-Assisted DOSY ('MAD') can help separate the signals of different constituents, resolving their spectra. Unfortunately, DOSY (including MAD) typically fails where signals overlap, as is common in 1 H NMR. Using 19 F NMR avoids such problems, because the great sensitivity of the 19 F chemical shift to local environment leads to very well-dispersed spectra. Another advantage is the absence of any 19 F background signals from the matrices typically used, avoiding interference with the analyte signals. In this study, differentiation among fluorophenol and fluoroaniline isomers was evaluated using normal and reverse micelles-of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) and dioctyl sodium sulfosuccinate (AOT)-as matrices. These surfactants provide useful diffusion separation in these difficult mixtures, with all the solutes interacting with the matrices to different extents, in some cases leading to differences in diffusion coefficient of more than 30%. The best matrices for separating the signals of both acid and basic species were shown to be AOT and CTAB, which are useful over a wide range of surfactant concentration. Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
ABSTRACT
The dependence of the magnitude and sign of (3)JHFF on the bond angle in fluoro-cycloalkene compounds is evaluated by electronic structure calculations using different levels of theory, viz. DFT, SOPPA(CCSD) and SOPPA(CC2). Localized molecular orbital contributions to (3)JHFF are analyzed to assess which orbitals are responsible for (3)JHFF and which are the most important coupling transmission mechanisms for each compound. Fluoro-ethylene is used as a model system to evaluate the dependence of the (3)JHFF coupling constant on the angle between the σCα-F and σCα'-HF vectors. Through-space and hyperconjugative transmission pathways and ring strain are identified as responsible for the opposite trend between (3)JHFF and bond angle, and for the negative signs obtained for the two molecules, respectively. One of the fluorine lone pairs, σCα'-HF, σCα-F, σCα'-Cß' bonding orbitals and the σ*Cα-F antibonding orbital are involved in the J-coupling pathways, according to analyses of pairwise-steric and hyperconjugative energies.