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Protonation‐Induced Chirality Drives Separation by Differential Ion Mobility Spectrometry

Christian Ieritano, J. C. Yves Le Blanc, Bradley B. Schneider, Justine R. Bissonnette, Alexander Haack, W. Scott Hopkins

2021Angewandte Chemie International Edition15 citationsDOI

Abstract

Upon development of a workflow to analyze (±)-Verapamil and its metabolites using differential mobility spectrometry (DMS), we noticed that the ionogram of protonated Verapamil consisted of two peaks. This was inconsistent with its metabolites, as each exhibited only a single peak in the respective ionograms. The unique behaviour of Verapamil was attributed to protonation at its tertiary amino moiety, which generated a stereogenic quaternary amine. The introduction of additional chirality upon N-protonation of Verapamil renders four possible stereochemical configurations for the protonated ion: (R,R), (S,S), (R,S), or (S,R). The (R,R)/(S,S) and (R,S)/(S,R) enantiomeric pairs are diastereomeric and thus exhibit unique conformations that are resolvable by linear and differential ion mobility techniques. Protonation-induced chirality appears to be a general phenomenon, as N-protonation of 12 additional chiral amines generated diastereomers that were readily resolved by DMS.

Topics & Concepts

ProtonationChemistryDiastereomerChirality (physics)StereocenterEnantiomerStereochemistryMoietyIonCrystallographyEnantioselective synthesisOrganic chemistryPhysicsQuantum mechanicsQuarkCatalysisChiral symmetry breakingNambu–Jona-Lasinio modelMass Spectrometry Techniques and ApplicationsAnalytical Chemistry and ChromatographyMetabolomics and Mass Spectrometry Studies