Abstract

Structures and properties of nonbonding interactions involving guanidinium-functionalized hosts and carboxylate substrates were investigated by a combination of ab initio and molecular dynamics approaches. The systems under study are on one hand intended to be a model of the arginine-anion bond, so often observed in proteins and nucleic acids, and on the other to provide an opportunity to investigate the influence of molecular structure on the formation of supramolecular complexes in detail. Use of DFT calculations, including extended basis sets and implicit water treatment, allowed us to determine minimum-energy structures and binding enthalpies that compared well with experimental data. Intermolecular forces were found to be mostly due to electrostatic interactions through three hydrogen bonds, one of which is bifurcate, and are sufficiently strong to induce a conformational change in the ligand consisting of a rotation of about 180 degrees around the guanidiniocarbonylpyrrole axis. Free binding energies of the complexes were evaluated through MD simulations performed in the presence of explicit water molecules by use of the molecular mechanics Poisson-Boltzmann solvent accessible surface area (MM-PBSA) and linear interaction energy (LIE) approaches. LIE energies were in quantitative agreement with experimental data. A detailed analysis of the MD simulations revealed that the complexes cannot be described in terms of a single binding structure, but that they are characterized by a significant internal mobility responsible for several low-energy metastable structures.

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