Jy. Liou et al., Reverse micelles as a catalyst for the nucleophilic aromatic substitution between glutathione and 2,4-dinitrochlorobenzene, J CHEM S P2, (10), 1999, pp. 2171-2176
Citations number
49
Categorie Soggetti
Physical Chemistry/Chemical Physics
Journal title
JOURNAL OF THE CHEMICAL SOCIETY-PERKIN TRANSACTIONS 2
The nucleophilic aromatic substitution (SNAr) between GSH and 2,4-dinitroch
lorobenzene was studied in reverse micellar systems composed of limited amo
unts of water, a surfactant with a polar head and a nonpolar tail, and the
organic solvent 2,2,4-trimethylpentane. When the surfactant was positively
charged and contained an aromatic ring in the polar head, the second-order
rate constant was increased by approximately two orders of magnitude as com
pared to that in aqueous solution. The rate enhancement could be attributed
to the stabilization of the negatively charged Meisenheimer sigma-complex
by the positively charged polar head and the weak aromatic ring's electric
quadrupole interactions of the surfactant. The reaction rate in reverse mic
elles composed of neutral polar head groups (Triton X-100) was increased by
3-fold, which may be explained by the interactions of the hydroxy groups o
f Triton molecules with the pi-system of the Meisenheimer complex. An inver
se relationship between the molar concentration [H2O]/[surfactant] ratio, w
hich reflects the inclusive volume of the reverse micellar particle, and th
e rate enhancement was observed for positively charged or hydroxy-containin
g reverse micelles, but opposite results were obtained with negatively char
ged reverse micelles. These reverse micellar systems thus mimic the active
site of a detoxification enzyme, glutathione transferase, in which stabiliz
ation of the Meisenheimer complex by a positively charged arginine residue,
on-edge quadrupole interactions of aromatic amino acids, and the hydroxy g
roup of tyrosine or threonine have been proposed in the enzyme-catalysed SN
Ar conjugation.