Synthesis and structural characterization of 6I,6II-diamino-6I,6II-dideoxy-cyclomaltoheptaose, a difunctionalized beta-cyclodextrin

Carbohydr Res. 1996 Feb 28;282(1):41-52. doi: 10.1016/0008-6215(95)00357-6.

Abstract

6I,6II-Diamino-6I,6II-dideoxy-cyclomaltoheptaose was prepared using the regioselective procedure described by Tabushi. The difunctionalized beta-cyclodextrin crystallizes as hexadecahydrate in the orthorhombic space group P2(1)2(1)2(1), with a = 11.395(3), b = 32.989(9), c = 17.560(5) A, V = 6601 A3, Z = 4. The structure was solved by molecular replacement techniques using the program PATSEE and was refined to a conventional final R = 0.058 for the 5031 observed reflections with I > or = 3 sigma(I). The beta-CD macrocycle presents only slight differences with respect to uncomplexed hydrated or methylated beta-CD. The macrocycle structure maintains an approximate seven-fold symmetry. The round shape of the cyclodextrin ring is stabilized by intramolecular O-H ... O H-bonds between the secondary hydroxyl groups of neighbouring glucose residues. Along the a axis, the beta-CD molecules are arranged in columns; the macrocycles form a herring-bone pattern, so that the cavity of each beta-CD molecule is closed at each end by neighbouring molecules. The macrocycles are directly linked to each other by H-bonds involving either primary and secondary hydroxyl or amino groups of symmetry-related molecules. The resulting layers are connected to each other by a dense intermolecular hydrogen-bond network, in which solvent molecules participate.

MeSH terms

  • Carbohydrate Sequence
  • Cyclodextrins / chemical synthesis*
  • Cyclodextrins / chemistry*
  • Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy
  • Models, Molecular
  • Molecular Sequence Data
  • Optical Rotation
  • Spectrometry, Mass, Fast Atom Bombardment
  • X-Ray Diffraction
  • beta-Cyclodextrins*

Substances

  • 6(I),6(II)-diamino-6(I),6(II)-dideoxycyclomaltoheptaose
  • Cyclodextrins
  • beta-Cyclodextrins
  • betadex