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Anhydrous Monoalkylguanidines in Aprotic and Nonpolar Solvents: Models for Deprotonated Arginine Side Chains in Membrane Environments

  1. Author:
    Banyikwa, Andrew Toyi
    Miller, Stephen
    Krebs, Richard A.
    Xiao, Yuewu
    Carney, Jeffrey M.
    Braiman, Mark S.
  2. Author Address

    Syracuse Univ, Ctr Sci & Technol, Chem Dept, Room 1-014, Syracuse, NY 13244 USA.Christopher Newport Univ, Chem Dept, 1 Ave Arts, Newport News, VA 23606 USA.EMD Millipore, 80 Ashby Rd, Bedford, MA 01730 USA.NCI, Chem Biol Lab, Natl Inst Hlth Ft Detrick, 376 Boyle St, Frederick, MD 21702 USA.Univ Dodoma, Coll Nat & Math Sci, Dept Chem, POB 259, Dodoma, Tanzania.
    1. Year: 2017
    2. Date: OCT
  1. Journal: ACS OMEGA
  2. AMER CHEMICAL SOC,
    1. 2
    2. 10
    3. Pages: 7239-7252
  3. Type of Article: Article
  4. ISSN: 2470-1343
  1. Abstract:

    In this study, the synthesis of crystalline dodecylguanidine free base and its spectroscopic characterization in nonpolar environments are described. IR as well as 1H and 15N NMR spectra of the free base dissolved in aprotic solvents are substantially different from the previously reported spectra of arginine, or other monoalkylguanidinium compounds, at high hydroxide concentrations. The current results provide improved modeling for the spectroscopic signals that would be expected from a deprotonated arginine in a nonpolar environment. On the basis of our spectra of the authentic dodecylguanidine free base, addition of large amounts of aqueous hydroxide to arginine or other monoalklyguanidinium salts does not deprotonate them. Instead, hydroxide addition leads to the formation of a guanidinium hydroxide complex, with a dissociation constant near similar to 500 mM that accounts for the established arginine pK value of similar to 13.7. We also report a method for synthesizing a compound containing both phenol and free-base guanidine groups, linked by a dodecyl chain that should be generalizable to other hydrocarbon linkers. Such alkyl-guanidine and phenolyl-alkyl-guanidine compounds can serve as small-molecule models for the conserved arginine-tyrosine groupings that have been observed in crystallographic structures of both microbial rhodopsins and G-protein-coupled receptors.

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External Sources

  1. DOI: 10.1021/acsomega.7b00281
  2. WOS: 000418744000099

Library Notes

  1. Fiscal Year: FY2017-2018
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