The challenge of site-selectivity must be overcome in many chemical research contexts, including selective functionalization in complex natural products and labeling of one biomolecule in a living system. Synthetic catalysts incorporating molecular recognition domains can mimic naturally-occurring enzymes to direct a chemical reaction to a particular instance of a functional group. We propose that DNA-conjugated small molecule catalysts (DCats), prepared by tethering a small molecule catalyst to a DNA aptamer, are a promising class of reagents for site-selective transformations. Specifically, a DNA-imidazole conjugate able to increase the rate of ester hydrolysis in a target ester by >100-fold compared with equimolar untethered imidazole was developed. Other esters are unaffected. Furthermore, DCat-catalyzed hydrolysis follows enzyme-like kinetics and a stimuli-responsive variant of the DCat enables programmable "turn on" of the desired reaction.
CITATION STYLE
Flanagan, M. L., Arguello, A. E., Colman, D. E., Kim, J., Krejci, J. N., Liu, S., … Gorin, D. J. (2018). A DNA-conjugated small molecule catalyst enzyme mimic for site-selective ester hydrolysis. Chemical Science, 9(8), 2105–2112. https://doi.org/10.1039/c7sc04554a
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.