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1.
J Org Chem ; 87(17): 11625-11633, 2022 Sep 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35984736

ABSTRACT

The gauche conformer in 1-X,2-Y-disubstituted ethanes, that is, the staggered orientation in which X and Y are in closer contact, is only favored for relatively small substituents that do not give rise to large X···Y steric repulsion. For more diffuse substituents, weakly attractive orbital interactions between antiperiplanar bonds (i.e., hyperconjugation) cannot overrule the repulsive forces between X and Y. Our quantum chemical analyses of the rotational isomerism of XCH2CH2Y (X = F, OH; Y = I) at ZORA-BP86-D3(BJ)/QZ4P reveal that indeed the anti conformer is generally favored due to a less destabilizing I···F and I···O-H steric repulsion. The only case when the gauche conformer is preferred is when the hydroxyl hydrogen is oriented toward the iodine atom in the 2-iodoethanol. This is because of the significantly stabilizing covalent component of the I···H-O intramolecular hydrogen bond. Therefore, we show that strong intramolecular interactions can overcome the steric repulsion between bulky substituents in 1,2-disubstituted ethanes and cause the gauche effect. Our quantum chemical computations have guided nuclear magnetic resonance experiments that confirm the increase in the gauche population as X goes from F to OH.

2.
J Phys Chem A ; 126(32): 5434-5448, 2022 Aug 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35930743

ABSTRACT

The Tc-99m nucleus is the most used nuclide in radiopharmaceuticals designed for imaging diagnosis. The metal can exist in nine distinct oxidation states and forms distinct coordination complexes with a variety of chelating agents and geometries. These complexes are usually characterized through Tc-99 NMR that is very sensitive to the Tc coordination sphere. Therefore, predicting Tc-99 NMR might be useful to assist experimentalists in structural characterization. In the present study, we propose three computational protocols for predicting Tc-99 NMR chemical shifts based on density functional theory calculations using relativistic and nonrelativistic Hamiltonians: the relativistic Model 1, the nonrelativistic Model 2, and the empirical nonrelativistic Model 3. In Models 2 and 3, the NMR-DKH basis set was used for all atoms, including the Tc, for which it was developed here. All models were applied for a set of 41 Tc-complexes with metal oxidation states 0, I, and V, for which the Tc-99 chemical shift was available experimentally. The mean absolute deviation and the mean relative deviation were 67 ppm and 4.8% (Model 1), 92 ppm and 6.2% (Model 2), and 65 ppm and 4.9% (Model 3), respectively. Last, the effect of the explicit solvent was evaluated for the [TcO2(en)2]+─Tc(V) complex. The calculated results for the Tc-99 NMR chemical shift at SO-ZORA-SSB-D/TZ2P-ZORA/COSMO//TPSS/def2-SVP/IEF-PCM(UFF) show that the inclusion of 14 water molecules (first solvation shell) together with the implicit solvation model leads to an absolute deviation of only 7 ppm (0.3%) from the experimental value, indicating that the solvent effects play a key role in predicting Tc-99 NMR.


Subject(s)
Radiopharmaceuticals , Technetium , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy/methods , Solvents/chemistry
3.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 9(13): 3720-3724, 2018 Jul 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29927254

ABSTRACT

NMR spectroscopy is one of the most useful methods for detection and characterization of hydrogen bond (H-bond) interactions in biological systems. For H bonds X-H···Y, where X and Y are O or N, it is generally believed that a decrease in 1H-shielding constants relates to a shortening of H-bond donor-acceptor distance. Here we investigated computationally the trend of 1H-shielding constants for hydrogen-bonded protons in a series of guanine C8-substituted GC pair model compounds as a function of the molecular structure. Furthermore, the electron density distribution around the hydrogen atom was analyzed with the Voronoi deformation density (VDD) method. Our findings demonstrate that 1H-shielding values of the hydrogen bond are determined by the depletion of charge around the hydrogen atom, which stems from the fact that electrons obey the Pauli exclusion principle.

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