Abstract

Cyclodextrins (CDs) are widely utilized in studies of chiral and molecular recognition. By changing the functionality of the guest molecule, the effect of such changes on recognition by the host CD molecule can be examined. We report crystal structure determinations for two nearly isomorphous complexes of phenylalanine derivatives: beta-CD/N-acetyl-L-phenylalanine methyl ester and beta-CD/N-acetyl-L-phenylalanine amide. The complexes crystallize as hydrated head-to-head host dimers with two included guest molecules in space group P1. The crystal packing is such that it presents a nonconstraining hydrophobic pocket adjacent to a hydrophilic region, where potential hydrogen-bonding interactions with hydroxyl groups of neighboring cyclodextrin molecules and waters of hydration can occur. The two host molecules display very similar conformations; only a few of the primary hydroxyl groups are conformationally disordered. There are a number of changes in the location of water of hydration molecules, some of which are the result of different hydrogen-bonding interactions. For the different guest molecules, similar modes of penetration are observed in the CD torus; however, there is a 0.985-A shift in the position of the guest molecules in the host torus, which takes place without changing the hydrophobic interactions displayed by the phenyl side chains. This observation and the thermal motion of the guest molecules in the ester complex are taken as evidence that complex binding forces are weak. The pseudopeptides experience a significant degree of flexibility in the crystalline environment provided by CD dimers. Conformational differences of the pseudopeptide backbones and the presence of disordered water molecules in the host-guest interface provide examples of different hydrogen-bonding schemes of similar potential energy. The crystal system presents an opportunity to establish a database of molecular interactions for small peptides and peptide analogues with waters of hydration and functional groups in nonconstraining binding environments.

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