nitrophenols and cyclen

nitrophenols has been researched along with cyclen* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for nitrophenols and cyclen

ArticleYear
Selective hydrolysis of phosphate monoester by a supramolecular phosphatase formed by the self-assembly of a bis(Zn(2+)-cyclen) complex, cyanuric acid, and copper in an aqueous solution (cyclen = 1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclododecane).
    Inorganic chemistry, 2011, Oct-17, Volume: 50, Issue:20

    In Nature, organized nanoscale structures such as proteins and enzymes are formed in aqueous media via intermolecular interactions between multicomponents. Supramolecular and self-assembling strategies provide versatile methods for the construction of artificial chemical architectures for controlling reaction rates and the specificities of chemical reactions, but most are designed in hydrophobic environments. The preparation of artificial catalysts that have potential in aqueous media mimicking natural enzymes such as hydrolases remains a great challenge in the fields of supramolecular chemistry. Herein, we describe that a dimeric Zn(2+) complex having a 2,2'-bipyridyl linker, cyanuric acid, and a Cu(2+) ion automatically assembles in an aqueous solution to form a 4:4:4 complex, which is stabilized by metal-ligand coordination bonds, π-π-stacking interactions, and hydrogen bonding and contains μ-Cu(2)(OH)(2) cores analogous to the catalytic centers of phosphatase, a dinuclear metalloenzyme. The 4:4:4 complex selectively accelerates the hydrolysis of a phosphate monoester, mono(4-nitrophenyl)phosphate, at neutral pH.

    Topics: Animals; Biomimetic Materials; Catalytic Domain; Copper; Crotalus; Crystallography, X-Ray; Cyclams; Escherichia coli; Esters; Heterocyclic Compounds; Hydrogen-Ion Concentration; Hydrolysis; Models, Molecular; Nitrophenols; Organometallic Compounds; Organophosphorus Compounds; Phosphates; Phosphoric Diester Hydrolases; Phosphoric Monoester Hydrolases; Solutions; Substrate Specificity; Triazines; Water; Zinc

2011
Vesicles and micelles from amphiphilic zinc(II)-cyclen complexes as highly potent promoters of hydrolytic DNA cleavage.
    Journal of the American Chemical Society, 2011, Dec-28, Volume: 133, Issue:51

    Phosphate esters are essential to any living organism and their specific hydrolysis plays an important role in many metabolic processes. As phosphodiester bonds can be extraordinary stable, as in DNA, great effort has been put into mimicking the active sites of hydrolytic enzymes which can easily cleave these linkages and were often found to contain one or more coordinated metal ions. With this in mind, we report micellar and vesicular Zn(II)-cyclen complexes which considerably promote the hydrolytic cleavage of native DNA and the activated model substrate bis(4-nitrophenyl)phosphate (BNPP). They are formed by self-assembly from amphiphilic derivatives of previously employed complexes in aqueous solution and therefore allow a simple and rapid connection of multiple active metal sites without great synthetic effort. Considering the hydrolytic cleavage of BNPP at 25 °C and pH 8, the micellar and vesicular metal catalysts show an increase of second-order rate constants (k(2)) by 4-7 orders of magnitude compared to the unimolecular complexes under identical conditions. At neutral pH, they produce the highest k(2) values reported so far. For pBR322 plasmid DNA, both a conversion of the supercoiled to the relaxed and linear form, and also a further degradation into smaller fragments by double strand cleavages could be observed after incubation with the vesicular Zn(II)-complexes. Finally, even the cleavage of nonactivated single-stranded oligonucleotides could be considerably promoted compared to background reaction.

    Topics: Cyclams; DNA; DNA Cleavage; Heterocyclic Compounds; Hydrolysis; Micelles; Nitrophenols; Zinc

2011