A DNA-conjugated small molecule catalyst enzyme mimic for site-selective ester hydrolysis

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Abstract

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.

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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

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