Maximilian Dürr
University of Erlangen-Nuremberg
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Featured researches published by Maximilian Dürr.
Nature Chemistry | 2016
Qi-Qiang Wang; Sergio Gonell; Stefan H. A. M. Leenders; Maximilian Dürr; Ivana Ivanović-Burmazović; Joost N. H. Reek
Tuning reagent and catalyst concentrations is crucial in the development of efficient catalytic transformations. In enzyme-catalysed reactions the substrate is bound—often by multiple non-covalent interactions—in a well-defined pocket close to the active site of the enzyme; this pre-organization facilitates highly efficient transformations. Here we report an artificial system that co-encapsulates multiple catalysts and substrates within the confined space defined by an M12L24 nanosphere that contains 24 endohedral guanidinium-binding sites. Cooperative binding means that sulfonate guests are bound much more strongly than carboxylates. This difference has been used to fix gold-based catalysts firmly, with the remaining binding sites left to pre-organize substrates. This strategy was applied to a Au(I)-catalysed cyclization of acetylenic acid to enol lactone in which the pre-organization resulted in much higher reaction rates. We also found that the encapsulated sulfonate-containing Au(I) catalysts did not convert neutral (acid) substrates, and so could have potential in the development of substrate-selective catalysis and base-triggered on/off switching of catalysis. Preorganization of catalysts and substrates can lead to significant rate enhancement—an effect often observed in enzyme catalysis. Now, a self-assembled nanosphere equipped with 24 guanidinium binding sites is demonstrated to strongly bind sulfonate-containing gold catalysts. Base-triggered co-encapsulation of carboxylate containing substrates leads to pronounced gating effects and dramatically enhanced reaction rates.
Inorganic Chemistry | 2015
Rudolf Wedmann; Achim Zahl; Tatyana E. Shubina; Maximilian Dürr; Frank W. Heinemann; Bernhard Eberhard Christian Bugenhagen; Peter Burger; Ivana Ivanović-Burmazović; Milos R. Filipovic
Hydrogen sulfide (H2S) and nitric oxide (NO) are important signaling molecules that regulate several physiological functions. Understanding the chemistry behind their interplay is important for explaining these functions. The reaction of H2S with S-nitrosothiols to form the smallest S-nitrosothiol, thionitrous acid (HSNO), is one example of physiologically relevant cross-talk between H2S and nitrogen species. Perthionitrite (SSNO(-)) has recently been considered as an important biological source of NO that is far more stable and longer living than HSNO. In order to experimentally address this issue here, we prepared SSNO(-) by two different approaches, which lead to two distinct species: SSNO(-) and dithionitric acid [HON(S)S/HSN(O)S]. (H)S2NO species and their reactivity were studied by (15)N NMR, IR, electron paramagnetic resonance and high-resolution electrospray ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry, as well as by X-ray structure analysis and cyclic voltammetry. The obtained results pointed toward the inherent instability of SSNO(-) in water solutions. SSNO(-) decomposed readily in the presence of light, water, or acid, with concomitant formation of elemental sulfur and HNO. Furthermore, SSNO(-) reacted with H2S to generate HSNO. Computational studies on (H)SSNO provided additional explanations for its instability. Thus, on the basis of our data, it seems to be less probable that SSNO(-) can serve as a signaling molecule and biological source of NO. SSNO(-) salts could, however, be used as fast generators of HNO in water solutions.
Inorganic Chemistry | 2014
Regina A. Baglia; Maximilian Dürr; Ivana Ivanović-Burmazović; David P. Goldberg
The reaction of a manganese(V)–oxo porphyrinoid complex with the Lewis acid B(C6F5)3 leads to reversible stabilization of the valence tautomer MnIV(O)(π-radical cation). The latter complex, in combination with B(C6F5)3, reacts with ArO–H substrates via formal hydrogen-atom transfer and exhibits dramatically increased reaction rates over the MnV(O) starting material.
Angewandte Chemie | 2014
Rafael Gramage-Doria; Joeri Hessels; Stefan H. A. M. Leenders; Oliver Tröppner; Maximilian Dürr; Ivana Ivanović-Burmazović; Joost N. H. Reek
Homogeneous transition-metal catalysis is a crucial technology for the sustainable preparation of valuable chemicals. The catalyst concentration is usually kept as low as possible, typically at mM or μM levels, and the effect of high catalyst concentration is hardly exploited because of solubility issues and the inherent unfavorable catalyst/substrate ratio. Herein, a self-assembly strategy is reported which leads to local catalyst concentrations ranging from 0.05 M to 1.1 M, inside well-defined nanospheres, whilst the overall catalyst concentration in solution remains at the conventional mM levels. We disclose that only at this high concentration, the gold(I) chloride is reactive and shows high selectivity in intramolecular CO and CC bond-forming cyclization reactions.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014
Sumit Sahu; Matthew G. Quesne; Casey G. Davies; Maximilian Dürr; Ivana Ivanović-Burmazović; Maxime A. Siegler; Guy N. L. Jameson; Sam P. de Visser; David P. Goldberg
The synthesis of a pentadentate ligand with strategically designed fluorinated arene groups in the second coordination sphere of a nonheme iron center is reported. The oxidatively resistant fluorine substituents allow for the trapping and characterization of an FeIV(O) complex at −20 °C. Upon warming of the FeIV(O) complex, an unprecedented arene C–F hydroxylation reaction occurs. Computational studies support the finding that substrate orientation is a critical factor in the observed reactivity. This work not only gives rare direct evidence for the participation of an FeIV(O) species in arene hydroxylation but also provides the first example of a high-valent iron–oxo complex that mediates aromatic C–F hydroxylation.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2015
Claudia Wilfer; Patricia Liebhäuser; Alexander Hoffmann; Hannes Erdmann; Oleg Grossmann; Leander Runtsch; Eva Paffenholz; Rahel Schepper; Regina Dick; Matthias Bauer; Maximilian Dürr; Ivana Ivanović-Burmazović; Sonja Herres-Pawlis
Bis(pyrazolyl)methane ligands are excellent components of model complexes used to investigate the activity of the enzyme tyrosinase. Combining the N donors 3-tert-butylpyrazole and 1-methylimidazole results in a ligand that is capable of stabilising a (μ-η(2) :η(2) )-dicopper(II) core that resembles the active centre of tyrosinase. UV/Vis spectroscopy shows blueshifted UV bands in comparison to other known peroxo complexes, due to donor competition from different ligand substituents. This effect was investigated with the help of theoretical calculations, including DFT and natural transition orbital analysis. The peroxo complex acts as a catalyst capable of hydroxylating a variety of phenols by using oxygen. Catalytic conversion with the non-biological phenolic substrate 8-hydroxyquinoline resulted in remarkable turnover numbers. In stoichiometric reactions, substrate-binding kinetics was observed and the intrinsic hydroxylation constant, kox , was determined for five phenolates. It was found to be the fastest hydroxylation model system determined so far, reaching almost biological activity. Furthermore, Hammett analysis proved the electrophilic character of the reaction. This sheds light on the subtle role of donor strength and its influence on hydroxylation activity.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2016
Lampros Milanos; Regine Brox; Theresa Frank; Gašper Poklukar; Ralf Palmisano; Reiner Waibel; Jürgen Einsiedel; Maximilian Dürr; Ivana Ivanović-Burmazović; Olav Larsen; Gertrud Malene Hjortø; Mette M. Rosenkilde; Nuska Tschammer
In this work we report a design, synthesis, and detailed functional characterization of unique strongly biased allosteric agonists of CXCR3 that contain tetrahydroisoquinoline carboxamide cores. Compound 11 (FAUC1036) is the first strongly biased allosteric agonist of CXCR3 that selectively induces weak chemotaxis and leads to receptor internalization and the β-arrestin 2 recruitment with potency comparable to that of the chemokine CXCL11 without any activation of G proteins. A subtle structural change (addition of a methoxy group, 14 (FAUC1104)) led to a contrasting biased allosteric partial agonist that activated solely G proteins, induced chemotaxis, but failed to induce receptor internalization or β-arrestin 2 recruitment. Concomitant structure-activity relationship studies indicated very steep structure-activity relationships, which steer the ligand bias between the β-arrestin 2 and G protein pathway. Overall, the information presented provides a powerful platform for further development and rational design of strongly biased allosteric agonists of CXCR3.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016
Alison C. McQuilken; Hirotoshi Matsumura; Maximilian Dürr; Alex M. Confer; John P. Sheckelton; Maxime A. Siegler; Tyrel M. McQueen; Ivana Ivanović-Burmazović; Pierre Moënne-Loccoz; David P. Goldberg
The nonheme iron complex, [Fe(NO)(N3PyS)]BF4, is a rare example of an {FeNO}(7) species that exhibits spin-crossover behavior. The comparison of X-ray crystallographic studies at low and high temperatures and variable-temperature magnetic susceptibility measurements show that a low-spin S = 1/2 ground state is populated at 0-150 K, while both low-spin S = 1/2 and high-spin S = 3/2 states are populated at T > 150 K. These results explain the observation of two N-O vibrational modes at 1737 and 1649 cm(-1) in CD3CN for [Fe(NO)(N3PyS)]BF4 at room temperature. This {FeNO}(7) complex reacts with dioxygen upon photoirradiation with visible light in acetonitrile to generate a thiolate-ligated, nonheme iron(III)-nitro complex, [Fe(III)(NO2)(N3PyS)](+), which was characterized by EPR, FTIR, UV-vis, and CSI-MS. Isotope labeling studies, coupled with FTIR and CSI-MS, show that one O atom from O2 is incorporated in the Fe(III)-NO2 product. The O2 reactivity of [Fe(NO)(N3PyS)]BF4 in methanol is dramatically different from CH3CN, leading exclusively to sulfur-based oxidation, as opposed to NO· oxidation. A mechanism is proposed for the NO· oxidation reaction that involves formation of both Fe(III)-superoxo and Fe(III)-peroxynitrite intermediates and takes into account the experimental observations. The stability of the Fe(III)-nitrite complex is limited, and decay of [Fe(III)(NO2)(N3PyS)](+) leads to {FeNO}(7) species and sulfur oxygenated products. This work demonstrates that a single mononuclear, thiolate-ligated nonheme {FeNO}(7) complex can exhibit reactivity related to both nitric oxide dioxygenase (NOD) and nitrite reductase (NiR) activity. The presence of the thiolate donor is critical to both pathways, and mechanistic insights into these biologically relevant processes are presented.
Inorganic Chemistry | 2016
Sabine Becker; Maximilian Dürr; Andreas Miska; Jonathan Becker; Christopher Gawlig; Ulrich Behrens; Ivana Ivanović-Burmazović; Siegfried Schindler
Copper chloride catalysis is a well-established field in organic and inorganic chemistry. However, in most cases a detailed mechanistic understanding of the individual reaction steps and identification of reactive intermediates are still missing. The present study reports the results of spectroscopic and spectrometric measurements that support formation of copper agglomerates during catalytic processes. The composition of CuCl2·2H2O in several coordinating solvents and the influence of basic coreagents such as NaO(t)Bu and K2CO3 on the structure in the solid state as well as in solution were investigated. Several experiments involving crystal structure determination, IR spectroscopy, and ultra-high-resolution cryospray-ionization mass spectrometry were performed. The crystal structures of [CuCl2(H2O)]·0.5(CH3)2CO (1), [Cu2(CH3CN)2Cl4] (2), [Cu3(CH3CN)3Cl6] (3), [Cu3Cl6(THF)4] (4), [Cu(DMSO)2Cl2] (5), (H2N(CH3)2)2[CuCl3] (6), and [Cu4OCl6(THF)(urea)3]·3THF·urea (8) are reported herein. It can be clearly demonstrated that μ4-oxido copper clusters of the formula [Cu4OCl6(solvent)4] are the main product from the reactions of CuCl2·2H2O and basic coreagents. As a final result of these experiments, it can be stated that μ4-oxido copper clusters most likely play an important role in the mechanism of copper chloride-catalyzed reactions.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2017
Patricia Liebhäuser; Kristina Keisers; Alexander Hoffmann; Thomas Schnappinger; Isabella Sommer; Anne Thoma; Claudia Wilfer; Roland Schoch; Kai Stührenberg; Matthias Bauer; Maximilian Dürr; Ivana Ivanović-Burmazović; Sonja Herres-Pawlis
Tyrosinase model systems pinpoint pathways to translating Natures synthetic abilities for useful synthetic catalysts. Mostly, they use N-donor ligands which mimic the histidine residues coordinating the two copper centres. Copper complexes with bis(pyrazolyl)methanes with pyridinyl or imidazolyl moieties are already reported as excellent tyrosinase models. Substitution of the pyridinyl donor results in the new ligand HC(3-tBuPz)2 (4-CO2 MePy) which stabilises a room-temperature stable μ-η2 :η2 -peroxide dicopper(II) species upon oxygenation. It reveals highly efficient catalytic activity as it hydroxylates 8-hydroxyquinoline in high yields (TONs of up to 20) and much faster than all other model systems (max. conversion within 7.5 min). Stoichiometric reactions with para-substituted sodium phenolates show saturation kinetics which are nearly linear for electron-rich substrates. The resulting Hammett correlation proves the electrophilic aromatic substitution mechanism. Furthermore, density functional theory (DFT) calculations elucidate the influence of the substituent at the pyridinyl donor: the carboxymethyl group adjusts the basicity and nucleophilicity without additional steric demand. This substitution opens up new pathways in reactivity tuning.