Title of article :
Highlighting the possible secondary interactions in the role of balhimycin and its analogues for enantiorecognition in capillary electrophoresis
Author/Authors :
Jiang، نويسنده , , Zhengjin and Yang، نويسنده , , Zhuohong and Süssmuth، نويسنده , , Roderich D. and Smith، نويسنده , , Norman Williams and Lai، نويسنده , , Shuting، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages :
8
From page :
1149
To page :
1156
Abstract :
It is believed that the enantiorecognition mechanism based on macrocyclic antibiotics involves multimodal interactions via hydrogen bonding, π–π interaction, steric hindrance, hydrophobic interaction and so on. A variety of enantiomeric N-benzoylated amino acids were separated using balhimycin (A) or its analogues bromobalhimycin (B) and dechlorobalhimycin (C) as chiral mobile phase additive using a CE method, which combined the partial filling technique with the dynamic coating technique and the co-EOF electrophoresis technique. The enantioresolution and the migration time were highly relevant to the structure of analytes, especially to the substitutions on the N-tagged benzoyl moiety of the amino acids. A steric effect and π–π interaction based mechanism is proposed in order to explain some observed enantioresolution differences between positional isomers. Notably dechlorobalhimycin exhibited the best enantioresolution for several N-benzoylated derivatives of leucine, which was rarely observed for N-dansylated amino acid derivatives. The hydrophobicity difference of the aglycone pocket among three chiral selectors was assumed to account for this behaviour.
Keywords :
Capillary electrophoresis , Enantioseparation , Balhimycin , N-Benzoylated amino acids , glycopeptide antibiotics
Journal title :
Journal of Chromatography A
Serial Year :
2010
Journal title :
Journal of Chromatography A
Record number :
1512799
Link To Document :
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