The vibrational theory of olfaction assumes that electron transfer occurs across odorants at the active sites of odorant receptors (ORs), serving as a sensitive measure of odorant vibrational frequencies, ultimately leading to olfactory perception. A previous study reported that human subjects differentiated hydrogen/ deuterium isotopomers (isomers with isotopic atoms) of the musk compound cyclopentadecanone as evidence supporting the theory. Here, we find no evidence for such differentiation at the molecular level. In fact, we find that the human musk-recognizing receptor, OR5AN1, identified using a heterologous OR expression system and robustly responding to cyclopentadecanone and muscone, fails to distinguish isotopomers of these compounds in vitro. Furthermore, the mouse (methylthio)methanethiol-recognizing receptor, MOR244-3, as well as other selected human and mouse ORs, responded similarly to normal, deuterated, and 13 C isotopomers of their respective ligands, paralleling our results with the musk receptor OR5AN1. These findings suggest that the proposed vibration theory does not apply to the human musk receptor OR5AN1, mouse thiol receptor MOR244-3, or other ORs examined. Also, contrary to the vibration theory predictions, muscone-d 30 lacks the 1,380-to 1,550-cm −1 IR bands claimed to be essential for musk odor. Furthermore, our theoretical analysis shows that the proposed electron transfer mechanism of the vibrational frequencies of odorants could be easily suppressed by quantum effects of nonodorant molecular vibrational modes. These and other concerns about electron transfer at ORs, together with our extensive experimental data, argue against the plausibility of the vibration theory.olfaction | isotopomers | cyclopentadecanone | muscone | electron transfer I n 1870, the British physician William Ogle wrote: "As in the eye and the ear the sensory impression is known to result not from the contact of material particles given off by the object seen or heard, but from waves or undulations of the ether or the air, one cannot but suspect that the same may be true in the remaining sense, and that the undulatory theory of smell. . . [may be] the true one" (1, 2). Of the 29 different "theories of odour" listed in the 1967 edition of The Chemical Senses (3), nine associate odor with vibrations, particularly those theories championed by Dyson (4, 5) and Wright (6-8). However, the premise that olfaction involves detection of vibrational frequencies of odorants remains highly speculative because neither the structures of the odorant receptors (ORs) nor the binding sites or the activation mechanisms triggered upon odorant binding to ORs have been established. In 1996-1997, Turin (9-12) elaborated on the undulatory theory of smell, as considered in more detail below, and suggested that a mechanism analogous to inelastic electron tunneling spectroscopy (13) may be involved, where tunneling electrons in the receptor probe the vibrational frequencies of odorants. In 2013, Gane et al. (14) In judging the plausibility...
Understanding olfaction at the molecular level is challenging due to the lack of crystallographic models of odorant receptors (ORs). To better understand the molecular mechanism of OR activation, we focused on chiral ()-muscone and other musk-smelling odorants due to their great importance and widespread use in perfumery and traditional medicine, as well as environmental concerns associated with bioaccumulation of musks with estrogenic/antiestrogenic properties. We experimentally and computationally examined the activation of human receptors OR5AN1 and OR1A1, recently identified as specifically responding to musk compounds. OR5AN1 responds at nanomolar concentrations to musk ketone and robustly to macrocyclic sulfoxides and fluorine-substituted macrocyclic ketones; OR1A1 responds only to nitromusks. Structural models of OR5AN1 and OR1A1 based on quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics (QM/MM) hybrid methods were validated through direct comparisons with activation profiles from site-directed mutagenesis experiments and analysis of binding energies for 35 musk-related odorants. The experimentally found chiral selectivity of OR5AN1 to ()- over ()-muscone was also computationally confirmed for muscone and fluorinated ()-muscone analogs. Structural models show that OR5AN1, highly responsive to nitromusks over macrocyclic musks, stabilizes odorants by hydrogen bonding to Tyr260 of transmembrane α-helix 6 and hydrophobic interactions with surrounding aromatic residues Phe105, Phe194, and Phe207. The binding of OR1A1 to nitromusks is stabilized by hydrogen bonding to Tyr258 along with hydrophobic interactions with surrounding aromatic residues Tyr251 and Phe206. Hydrophobic/nonpolar and hydrogen bonding interactions contribute, respectively, 77% and 13% to the odorant binding affinities, as shown by an atom-based quantitative structure-activity relationship model.
It has been shown for the first time that triazolium pre-catalysts promote (in the presence of base) highly chemoselective crossed acyloin condensation reactions between aliphatic and ortho-substituted aromatic aldehydes. An o-bromine atom can serve as a temporary directing group to ensure high chemoselectivity (regardless of the nature of the other substituents on the aromatic ring) which then can be conveniently removed. The process is of broad scope and is operationally simple as it does not require the preactivation of any of the coupling partners to ensure selectivtiy. Preliminary data indicates that highly enantioselective variants of the reaction are feasible using chiral pre-catalysts.α-Hydroxy ketones are highly useful building blocks for the synthesis of heterocycles, natural products, agrochemicals and (inter alia 1 ) pharmaceuticals. 2 In addition, the unsymmetrical nature of the building block allows for access to other important synthetic precursors, such as chiral 1,2-diols and amino alcohols. 3 As a consequence, the development of routes to these compounds via metal-catalysed heteroatom transfer 4 and organocatalytic α-oxidation chemistry 5 have been extensively investigated
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