Abstract

The copper(II) coordination chemistry of westiellamide (H(3)L(wa)), as well as of three synthetic analogues with an [18]azacrown-6 macrocyclic structure but with three imidazole (H(3)L(1)), oxazole (H(3)L(2)), and thiazole (H(3)L(3)) rings instead of oxazoline, is reported. As in the larger patellamide rings, the N(heterocycle)-N(peptide)-N(heterocycle) binding site is highly preorganized for copper(II) coordination. In contrast to earlier reports, the macrocyclic peptides have been found to form stable mono- and dinuclear copper(II) complexes. The coordination of copper(II) has been monitored by high-resolution electrospray mass spectrometry (ESI-MS), spectrophotometric and polarimetric titrations, and EPR and IR spectroscopies, and the structural assignments have been supported by time-dependent studies (UV/Vis/NIR, ESI-MS, and EPR) of the complexation reaction of copper(II) with H(3)L(1). Density functional theory (DFT) calculations have been used to model the structures of the copper(II) complexes on the basis of their spectroscopic data. The copper(II) ion has a distorted square-pyramidal geometry with one or two coordinated solvent molecules (CH(3)OH) in the mononuclear copper(II) cyclic peptide complexes, but the coordination sphere in [Cu(H(2)L(wa))(OHCH(3))](+) differs from those in the synthetic analogues, [Cu(H(2)L)(OHCH(3))(2)](+) (L = L(1), L(2), L(3)). Dinuclear copper(II) complexes ([Cu(II) (2)(HL)(mu-X)](+); X = OCH(3), OH; L = L(1), L(2), L(3), L(wa)) are observed in the mass spectra. While a dipole-dipole coupled EPR spectrum is observed for the dinuclear copper(II) complex of H(3)L(3), the corresponding complexes with H(3)L (L = L(1), L(2), L(wa)) are EPR-silent. This may be explained in terms of strong antiferromagnetic coupling (H(3)L(1)) and/or a low concentration of the dicopper(II) complexes (H(3)L(wa), H(3)L(2)), in agreement with the mass spectrometric observations.

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