| Literature DB >> 24557137 |
Michal Juríček1, Nathan L Strutt1, Jonathan C Barnes1, Anna M Butterfield2, Edward J Dale1, Kim K Baldridge3, J Fraser Stoddart1, Jay S Siegel3.
Abstract
Stereoelectronic complementarity between the active site of an enzyme and the transition state of a reaction is one of the tenets of enzyme catalysis. This report illustrates the principles of enzyme catalysis (first proposed by Pauling and Jencks) through a well-defined model system that has been fully characterized crystallographically, computationally and kinetically. Catalysis of the bowl-to-bowl inversion processes that pertain to corannulene is achieved by combining ground-state destabilization and transition-state stabilization within the cavity of an extended tetracationic cyclophane. This synthetic receptor fulfils a role reminiscent of a catalytic antibody by stabilizing the planar transition state for the bowl-to-bowl inversion of (ethyl)corannulene (which accelerates this process by a factor of ten at room temperature) by an induced-fit mechanism first formulated by Koshland.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24557137 DOI: 10.1038/nchem.1842
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Chem ISSN: 1755-4330 Impact factor: 24.427