This paper describes the synthesis
of giant cyclic molecules having
diameters of 10–20 nm. The molecules are prepared through the
reactions of a fusion protein building block with small molecule linkers
that are terminated in irreversible inhibitors of enzyme domains present
in the fusion. This building block has N-terminal cutinase and C-terminal
SnapTag domains that react irreversibly with p-nitrophenyl
phosphonate (pNPP) and benzylguanine (BG) groups, respectively. We
use a bis-BG and a BG-pNPP linker to join these fusion proteins into
linear structures that can then react with a bis-pNPP linker that
joins the ends into a cyclic product. The last step can occur intramolecularly,
to give the macrocycle, or intermolecularly with another equivalent
of linker, to give a linear product. Because these are coupled first-
and second-order processes, an analysis of product yields from reactions
performed at a range of linker concentrations gives rate constants
for cyclization. We determined these to be 9.7 × 10–3 s–1, 2.3 × 10–3 s–1, and 8.1 × 10–4 s–1 for
the dimer, tetramer, and hexamer, respectively. This work demonstrates
an efficient route to cyclic macromolecules having nanoscale dimensions
and provides new scaffolds that can be generated using the megamolecule
approach.
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Modica, Justin
A.; Lin, Yao; Mrksich, Milan (2018). Synthesis
of Cyclic Megamolecules. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.8b02665