The total solute retention by a chemically modified stationary phase (CMSP) has been shown several times to be a potential tool for studying the binding abilities of the bound compound. In this article, we present a methodology for the deconvolution of the total retention into structure-specific contributions. Three complementary silica-based CMSPs were prepared: 1) non-modified silica, 2) silica modified by syn-bis-Tröger's base (a molecular tweezer) and 3) silica modified by anti-bis-Tröger's base (a non-tweezer molecule). These were characterized by elemental analysis and Raman spectroscopy, and used to assemble liquid chromatography (LC) columns. The total retention factors were estimated for electron-deficient nitro- and cyano-derivatives of benzene in both normal and reverse elution modes. The total retention factor was considered to be the sum of structure-specific retention factors, each related to the affinity (the binding constant) of a specific structure (the binding site), and its content in the modified silica, as defined for weak-affinity chromatography (WAC). The obtained structure-specific contributions are in line with the binding studies of ligands in solution. They reveal details of the retention mechanism, suggesting a more suitable attachment of ligands, and expose the shortcomings of evaluations based solely on the total retentions.
Keywords: binding constant; bound receptor; retention factor; retention mechanism; tweezer effect; weak affinity chromatography.
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