research communications
L-cystine dihydrochloride
of seleno-aDepartment of Chemistry, University of Oslo, PO Box 1033 Blindern, N-0315 Oslo, Norway
*Correspondence e-mail: c.h.gorbitz@kjemi.uio.no
Numerous crystal structures are available for the dimeric amino acid cystine. In proteins it is formed by oxidation of the –SH thiol groups of two closely spaced cysteine residues, resulting in the formation of a familiar disulfide bridge. The title compound [systematic name: (R,R)-1,1′-dicarboxy-2,2′-(diselanediyl)diethanaminium dichloride], C6H14N2O4Se22+·2Cl−, is the first example of a small molecule structure of the biologically important analogue with a —CH2—Se—Se—CH2— bridging unit. Bond lengths and angles of seleno-L-cystine dihydrochloride and its isotypic sulfur analogue L-cystine dihydrochloride are compared.
Keywords: crystal structure; L-cystine analogue; Se—Se bridge; cancer therapy; isotypism.
CCDC reference: 1403356
1. Chemical context
In addition to the 20 amino acids directly encoded by the N-formylmethionine, are considered to belong to a group of 23 proteinogenic amino acids. The UGA codon, normally a stop codon, is made to encode selenocysteine by the presence of a selenocysteine insertion sequence (SECIS) in the (Kryukov et al., 2003).
three more are incorporated into proteins during translation. These three, selenocystine, pyrrolysine andAnalogous to the common sulfur analogue cysteine, selenocysteine dimerizes through the formation of an Se—Se bridge to selenocystin, a substance that has received considerable attention recently for its anticancer efficacy (Yu et al., 2015) as well as its potential in the prevention of cardiovascular and neurodegenerative diseases (Weekley & Harris, 2013).
In the Cambridge Structural Database (CSD, version 5.36; Groom & Allen, 2014) there are about 80 distinct structures of cystine deposited, either as an amino acid, a modified amino acid or as an integrate part of a peptide or another large organic molecule. In contrast, there are no entries for selenocystine (and also none for sulfur–selenium hybrids with a —CH2—S—Se—CH2— bridge). To provide detailed structural information for this biologically important link, an investigation of its structure, in the dihydrochloride salt C6H14N2O4Se22+·2Cl−, (I), has been undertaken.
2. Structural commentary
The molecular structure of (I) is shown in Fig. 1a. A twofold rotation axis relates the two parts of the molecule. The crystal packing is depicted in Fig. 2, with molecules stacked on top of each other along the 5.2529 (4) Å monoclinic axis. Compound (I) is isotypic with the structure of L-cystine dihydrochloride, (II) (Gupta et al., 1974; Jones et al., 1974; Leela & Ramamurthi, 2007), but not with the structure of L-cystine dihydrobromide (Anbuchezhiyan et al., 2010), which forms a related packing arrangement but crystallizes in the orthorhombic P21212. The disulfide/diselenide bridges adopt helical conformations in all three structures, characterized by having gauche —C—C—X—X—, —C—X—X—C— and —X—X—C—C— torsion angles (X = S or Se) of the same sign, in this case between −81 and −89° [Table 1; —C—C—X—X— = —X—X—C—C— by symmetry]. Geometric parameters for (I) and (II) are furthermore compared in Table 1 with average values from 16 acyclic —CH2—Se—Se—CH2— links in non-amino acid structures retrieved from the CSD (Groom & Allen, 2014). The bond lengths and bond angles of (I) are similar to those in the previous seleno structures. The most important differences with respect to (II) [X-ray data at 173 K: a = 18.4405 (15), b = 5.2116 (6), c = 7.2191 (6) Å, β = 103.856 (6)°; Leela & Ramamurthi, 2007] are (obviously) the two Se—Se and S—S bond lengths, with modest changes for bond angles and torsion angles. Concerning the dimensions of the there is above all an increase in the length of the cell edge a (+ 0.364 Å, 2%) due to longer C—Se than C—S bonds. An equivalent, anticipated effect on c as a result of the increased length of the Se—Se bond, which runs parallel to the z axis, is effectively counteracted by a 2.52° decrease for the two C—Se—Se angles along the bridge compared to the C—S—S angles, see: Fig. 1b and Table 1. The length of the short monoclinic axis b is determined by direct stacking of amino acid molecules, for which the S-to-Se substitution has less impact since neither is involved in any close intermolecular contacts.
3. Supramolecular features
The four strong hydrogen bonds with N—H and O—H donors all have Cl− as the acceptor atom (Fig. 3a). The geometric parameters of the hydrogen bonds listed in Table 2 are almost identical to those of (II). There is also a three-centre interaction with a Cα—H donor and two carbonyl oxygen atoms as acceptors, Fig. 3b.
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4. Synthesis and crystallization
Selenocystine has very low solubility in water as well as in organic solvents, including trifluoroethanol and 1,1,1,3,3,3-hexafluoropropan-2-ol, so a M NaOH solution. 100 µl of this solution was pipetted into a small test tube (5 × 50 mm) to which a small amount of BTB pH indicator was added. The tube was sealed with parafilm punctured with a needle (one small hole) and placed inside a larger tube with concentrated hydrochloric acid. After 15 h the colour had shifted from blue to green, and small crystals of the hydrochloride could be harvested.
was prepared in 0.15. Refinement
Crystal data, data collection and structure . The position of the carboxyl H atom was restrained to the plane defined by O1, O2, C1 and C2; other H atoms were positioned with idealized geometry with fixed C/N—H distances for NH3, CH2 (methylene) and CH (methine) groups of 0.91, 0.99 and 1.00 Å, respectively. was permitted for the ammonium group. Uiso(H) values were set to 1.2Ueq of the or 1.5Ueq for the ammonium group.
details are summarized in Table 3
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A rather large residual peak in the Δρmax = 4.55 e Å−3, remained after completion of the This peak is located on the twofold rotation axis at the center of the Se—Se bond, and evidently reflects bonding electrons. As a test, an extra isotropic C atom was introduced close to the axis. Its occupancy was subsequently refined to 0.17 (equivalent to one electron), and the R-factor fell from 0.0233 to 0.0180.
withSupporting information
CCDC reference: 1403356
10.1107/S205698901501021X/wm5154sup1.cif
contains datablocks I, global. DOI:Structure factors: contains datablock I. DOI: 10.1107/S205698901501021X/wm5154Isup2.hkl
Supporting information file. DOI: 10.1107/S205698901501021X/wm5154Isup3.cml
In addition to the 20 amino acids directly encoded by the
three more are incorporated into proteins during translation. These three, selenocystine, pyrrolysine and N-formylmethionine, are considered to belong to a group of 23 proteinogenic amino acids. The UGA codon, normally a stop codon, is made to encode selenocysteine by the presence of a selenocysteine insertion sequence (SECIS) in the (Kryukov et al., 2003).Analogous to the common sulfur analogue cysteine, selenocysteine dimerizes through the formation of an Se—Se bridge to selenocystin, a substance that has received considerable attention recently for its anticancer efficacy (Yu et al., 2015) as well as its potential in the prevention of cardiovascular and neurodegenerative diseases (Weekley & Harris, 2013).
In the Cambridge Structural Database (CSD, version 5.36; Groom & Allen, 2014) there are about 80 distinct structures of cystine deposited, either as an amino acid, a modified amino acid or as an integrate part of a peptide or another large organic molecule. In contrast, there are no entries for selenocystine (and also none for sulfur–selenium hybrids with a —CH2—S—Se—CH2— bridge). To provide detailed structural information for this biologically important link, an investigation of its structure, in the dihydrochloride salt C6H14N2O4Se22+·2Cl-, (I), has been undertaken.
The molecular structure of (I) is shown in Fig. 1a. A twofold rotation axis relates the two parts of the molecule. The crystal packing is depicted in Fig. 2, with molecules stacked on top of each other along the 5.2529 (4) Å monoclinic axis. Compound (I) is isotypic with the structure of L-cystine dihydrochloride, (II) (Gupta et al., 1974; Jones et al., 1974; Leela & Ramamurthi, 2007), but not with the structure of L-cystine dihydrobromide (Anbuchezhiyan et al., 2010), which forms a related packing arrangement but crystallizes in the orthorhombic β = 103.856 (6)°; Leela & Ramamurthi, 2007] are (obviously) the two Se—Se and S—S bond lengths, with modest changes for bond angles and torsion angles. Concerning the dimensions of the there is above all an increase in the length of the cell edge a (+ 0.364 Å, 2%) due to longer C—Se than C—S bonds. An equivalent, anticipated effect on c as a result of the increased length of the Se—Se bond, which runs parallel to the z axis, is effectively counteracted by a 2.52° decrease for the two C—Se—Se angles along the bridge compared to the C—S—S angles, see: Fig. 1b and Table 1. The length of the short monoclinic axis b is determined by direct stacking of amino acid molecules, for which the S-to-Se substitution has less impact since neither is involved in any close intermolecular contacts.
P21212. The disulfide/diselenide bridges adopt helical conformations in all three structures, characterized by having gauche —C—C—X—X—, —C—X—X—C— and —X—X—C—C— torsion angles (X = S or Se) of the same sign, in this case between -81 and -89° [Table 1; (—C—C—X—X— = —X—X—C—C— by symmetry]. Geometric parameters for (I) and (II) are furthermore compared in Table 1 with average values from 16 acyclic —CH2—Se—Se—CH2— links in non-amino acid structures retrieved from the CSD (Groom & Allen, 2014). The bond lengths and bond angles of (I) are similar to those in the previous seleno structures. The most important differences with respect to (II) [X-ray data at 173 K: a = 18.4405 (15), b = 5.2116 (6), c = 7.2191 (6) Å,The four strong hydrogen bonds with N—H and O—H donors all have Cl- as the acceptor atom (Fig. 3a). The geometric parameters of the hydrogen bonds listed in Table 2 are almost identical to those of (II). There is also a three-centre interaction with a Cα—H donor and two carbonyl oxygen atoms as acceptors, Fig. 3b.
Selenocystine has very low solubility in water as well as in organic solvents, including trifluoroethanol and 1,1,1,3,3,3-hexafluoropropan-2-ol, so a
was prepared in 0.1 M NaOH solution. 100 µl of this solution was pipetted into a small test tube (5 × 50 mm) to which a small amount of BTB pH indicator was added. The tube was sealed with parafilm punctured with a needle (one small hole) and placed inside a larger tube with concentrated hydrochloric acid. After 15 h the colour had shifted from blue to green, and small crystals of the hydrochloride could be harvested.Crystal data, data collection and structure
details are summarized in Table 3. The position of the carboxyl H atom was restrained to the plane defined by O1, O2, C1 and C2; other H atoms were positioned with idealized geometry with fixed C/N—H distances for NH3, CH2 (methylene) and CH (methine) groups of 0.91, 0.99 and 1.00 Å, respectively. was permitted for the ammonium group of the zwitterionic molecule. Uiso(H) values were set to 1.2Ueq of the or 1.5Ueq for the ammonium group.A rather large residual peak in the ρmax = 4.55 e Å-3, remained after completion of the This peak is located on the twofold rotation axis at the center of the Se—Se bond, and evidently reflects bonding electrons. As a test, an extra isotropic C atom was introduced close to the axis. Its occupancy was subsequently refined to 0.17 (equivalent to one electron), and the R-factor fell from 0.0233 to 0.0180.
with ΔData collection: APEX2 (Bruker, 2014); cell
SAINT (Bruker, 2014); data reduction: SAINT (Bruker, 2014); program(s) used to solve structure: SHELXT (Sheldrick, 2015a); program(s) used to refine structure: SHELXL2014 (Sheldrick, 2015b); molecular graphics: Mercury (Macrae et al., 2008); software used to prepare material for publication: SHELXL2014 (Sheldrick, 2015b).Fig. 1. (a) The molecular structure of seleno-L-cystine dihydrochloride. The right-hand part, coloured in a light tone, is generated by application of twofold rotation symmetry in space group C2; Se1*, C3* etc are generated by symmetry code -x+1, y, -z. Displacement ellipsoids are shown at the 50% probability level. (b) Best overlap between the structures of (I) (dark grey O, N and C atoms) and (II) (light grey; Leela & Ramamurthi, 2007) with a root-mean-square deviation of 0.133 Å. The view is along the twofold rotation axis (lens-shaped symbol), the dashed line gives the direction of the z axis. | |
Fig. 2. The crystal packing of seleno-L-cystine dihydrochloride viewed approximately along the b axis. | |
Fig. 3. (a) Stereodrawing showing the coordination of hydrogen-bond donors around a Cl- anion (see Table 2 for symmetry operators). (b) Tape motif along the b axis generated from Cα—H···O hydrogen bonds. O1* is at (x, y + 1, z), O1' at (-x + 3/2, y + 1/2, -z + 1). Side chains have been truncated beyond Cβ. |
C6H14N2O4Se22+·2(Cl−) | F(000) = 396 |
Mr = 407.02 | Dx = 1.925 Mg m−3 |
Monoclinic, C2 | Mo Kα radiation, λ = 0.71073 Å |
a = 18.8045 (16) Å | Cell parameters from 9938 reflections |
b = 5.2529 (4) Å | θ = 2.2–40.2° |
c = 7.2719 (6) Å | µ = 5.65 mm−1 |
β = 102.219 (1)° | T = 100 K |
V = 702.03 (10) Å3 | Needle, colourless |
Z = 2 | 0.85 × 0.08 × 0.07 mm |
Bruker D8 Advance single-crystal CCD diffractometer | 4209 independent reflections |
Radiation source: fine-focus sealed tube | 4080 reflections with I > 2σ(I) |
Graphite monochromator | Rint = 0.024 |
Detector resolution: 8.3 pixels mm-1 | θmax = 40.2°, θmin = 2.2° |
Sets of exposures each taken over 0.5° ω rotation scans | h = −34→34 |
Absorption correction: multi-scan (SADABS; Bruker, 2014) | k = −9→9 |
Tmin = 0.514, Tmax = 1.000 | l = −13→13 |
11089 measured reflections |
Refinement on F2 | Hydrogen site location: inferred from neighbouring sites |
Least-squares matrix: full | H atoms treated by a mixture of independent and constrained refinement |
R[F2 > 2σ(F2)] = 0.023 | w = 1/[σ2(Fo2) + (0.0169P)2 + 0.004P] where P = (Fo2 + 2Fc2)/3 |
wR(F2) = 0.062 | (Δ/σ)max < 0.001 |
S = 1.10 | Δρmax = 4.55 e Å−3 |
4209 reflections | Δρmin = −0.87 e Å−3 |
78 parameters | Absolute structure: Flack x determined using 1708 quotients (Parsons et al., 2013) |
3 restraints | Absolute structure parameter: 0.044 (4) |
C6H14N2O4Se22+·2(Cl−) | V = 702.03 (10) Å3 |
Mr = 407.02 | Z = 2 |
Monoclinic, C2 | Mo Kα radiation |
a = 18.8045 (16) Å | µ = 5.65 mm−1 |
b = 5.2529 (4) Å | T = 100 K |
c = 7.2719 (6) Å | 0.85 × 0.08 × 0.07 mm |
β = 102.219 (1)° |
Bruker D8 Advance single-crystal CCD diffractometer | 4209 independent reflections |
Absorption correction: multi-scan (SADABS; Bruker, 2014) | 4080 reflections with I > 2σ(I) |
Tmin = 0.514, Tmax = 1.000 | Rint = 0.024 |
11089 measured reflections |
R[F2 > 2σ(F2)] = 0.023 | H atoms treated by a mixture of independent and constrained refinement |
wR(F2) = 0.062 | Δρmax = 4.55 e Å−3 |
S = 1.10 | Δρmin = −0.87 e Å−3 |
4209 reflections | Absolute structure: Flack x determined using 1708 quotients (Parsons et al., 2013) |
78 parameters | Absolute structure parameter: 0.044 (4) |
3 restraints |
Geometry. All e.s.d.'s (except the e.s.d. in the dihedral angle between two l.s. planes) are estimated using the full covariance matrix. The cell e.s.d.'s are taken into account individually in the estimation of e.s.d.'s in distances, angles and torsion angles; correlations between e.s.d.'s in cell parameters are only used when they are defined by crystal symmetry. An approximate (isotropic) treatment of cell e.s.d.'s is used for estimating e.s.d.'s involving l.s. planes. |
x | y | z | Uiso*/Ueq | ||
Se1 | 0.50147 (2) | 0.56610 (5) | 0.16037 (2) | 0.01306 (4) | |
Cl1 | 0.65288 (2) | 0.16979 (8) | 0.87546 (6) | 0.01345 (7) | |
O1 | 0.69775 (8) | 0.3451 (3) | 0.4104 (2) | 0.0158 (2) | |
O2 | 0.62968 (9) | 0.5697 (5) | 0.57259 (19) | 0.0225 (3) | |
H4 | 0.6356 (18) | 0.454 (12) | 0.644 (6) | 0.058 (15)* | |
N1 | 0.67823 (8) | 0.6777 (3) | 0.1266 (2) | 0.0125 (2) | |
H1 | 0.6681 | 0.8028 | 0.0384 | 0.019* | |
H2 | 0.6563 | 0.5305 | 0.0787 | 0.019* | |
H3 | 0.7272 | 0.6536 | 0.1591 | 0.019* | |
C1 | 0.66257 (8) | 0.5306 (3) | 0.4320 (2) | 0.0125 (3) | |
C2 | 0.65058 (9) | 0.7531 (3) | 0.2961 (2) | 0.0114 (2) | |
H21 | 0.6808 | 0.8988 | 0.3574 | 0.014* | |
C3 | 0.57160 (9) | 0.8414 (3) | 0.2457 (3) | 0.0123 (2) | |
H31 | 0.5667 | 0.9713 | 0.1451 | 0.015* | |
H32 | 0.5592 | 0.9238 | 0.3573 | 0.015* |
U11 | U22 | U33 | U12 | U13 | U23 | |
Se1 | 0.00843 (6) | 0.01357 (7) | 0.01686 (7) | −0.00112 (6) | 0.00199 (4) | 0.00422 (7) |
Cl1 | 0.01334 (15) | 0.01271 (15) | 0.01538 (15) | 0.00216 (12) | 0.00550 (12) | 0.00565 (12) |
O1 | 0.0175 (6) | 0.0106 (5) | 0.0193 (6) | 0.0028 (4) | 0.0037 (5) | 0.0040 (4) |
O2 | 0.0349 (7) | 0.0201 (6) | 0.0146 (5) | 0.0104 (8) | 0.0100 (5) | 0.0067 (7) |
N1 | 0.0104 (5) | 0.0118 (5) | 0.0159 (5) | 0.0005 (4) | 0.0045 (4) | 0.0045 (5) |
C1 | 0.0125 (5) | 0.0113 (7) | 0.0126 (6) | 0.0005 (4) | 0.0000 (4) | 0.0034 (4) |
C2 | 0.0114 (6) | 0.0083 (5) | 0.0138 (6) | 0.0003 (5) | 0.0011 (5) | 0.0021 (5) |
C3 | 0.0125 (6) | 0.0096 (5) | 0.0147 (6) | 0.0022 (5) | 0.0029 (5) | 0.0019 (5) |
Se1—C3 | 1.9671 (18) | N1—H2 | 0.9100 |
Se1—Se1i | 2.3213 (4) | N1—H3 | 0.9100 |
O1—C1 | 1.206 (2) | C1—C2 | 1.516 (2) |
O2—C1 | 1.319 (2) | C2—C3 | 1.525 (2) |
O2—H4 | 0.79 (6) | C2—H21 | 1.0000 |
N1—C2 | 1.490 (2) | C3—H31 | 0.9900 |
N1—H1 | 0.9100 | C3—H32 | 0.9900 |
C3—Se1—Se1i | 100.88 (5) | N1—C2—C3 | 112.00 (14) |
C1—O2—H4 | 112 (4) | C1—C2—C3 | 113.22 (14) |
C2—N1—H1 | 109.5 | N1—C2—H21 | 107.9 |
C2—N1—H2 | 109.5 | C1—C2—H21 | 107.9 |
H1—N1—H2 | 109.5 | C3—C2—H21 | 107.9 |
C2—N1—H3 | 109.5 | C2—C3—Se1 | 113.96 (12) |
H1—N1—H3 | 109.5 | C2—C3—H31 | 108.8 |
H2—N1—H3 | 109.5 | Se1—C3—H31 | 108.8 |
O1—C1—O2 | 125.92 (18) | C2—C3—H32 | 108.8 |
O1—C1—C2 | 123.24 (17) | Se1—C3—H32 | 108.8 |
O2—C1—C2 | 110.84 (16) | H31—C3—H32 | 107.7 |
N1—C2—C1 | 107.72 (14) | ||
O1—C1—C2—N1 | 9.3 (2) | N1—C2—C3—Se1 | 70.66 (16) |
O2—C1—C2—N1 | −170.64 (15) | C1—C2—C3—Se1 | −51.39 (17) |
O1—C1—C2—C3 | 133.72 (17) | C2—C3—Se1—Se1i | −88.72 (12) |
O2—C1—C2—C3 | −46.24 (19) | C3—Se1—Se1i—C3i | −83.05 (10) |
Symmetry code: (i) −x+1, y, −z. |
D—H···A | D—H | H···A | D···A | D—H···A |
N1—H1···Cl1ii | 0.91 | 2.25 | 3.1425 (16) | 167 |
N1—H2···Cl1iii | 0.91 | 2.40 | 3.2110 (18) | 149 |
N1—H3···Cl1iv | 0.91 | 2.32 | 3.1794 (15) | 157 |
O2—H4···Cl1 | 0.79 (6) | 2.22 (6) | 3.0080 (19) | 172 (4) |
C2—H21···O1v | 1.00 | 2.39 | 3.292 (2) | 150 |
C2—H21···O1iv | 1.00 | 2.55 | 3.216 (2) | 124 |
Symmetry codes: (ii) x, y+1, z−1; (iii) x, y, z−1; (iv) −x+3/2, y+1/2, −z+1; (v) x, y+1, z. |
Compound | C—Se/C—S | Se—Se/S—S | C—C—Se/S | C—Se/S—Se/S | C—C—Se/S—Se/S | C—Se/S—Se/S—C |
(I) | 1.9671 (18) | 2.3213 (4) | 113.96 (12) | 100.88 (5) | -88.72 (12) | -83.05 (10) |
Averagea | 1.967 | 2.310 | 114.17 | 101.29 | ||
(II)b | 1.817 | 2.040 | 114.48 | 103.40 | -89.04 | -81.04 |
Notes: (a) average of 16 –CH2—Se—Se—CH2– bridges in acyclic non-amino acid structures; (b) Leela & Ramamurthi (2007). |
D—H···A | D—H | H···A | D···A | D—H···A |
N1—H1···Cl1i | 0.91 | 2.25 | 3.1425 (16) | 167.1 |
N1—H2···Cl1ii | 0.91 | 2.40 | 3.2110 (18) | 149.2 |
N1—H3···Cl1iii | 0.91 | 2.32 | 3.1794 (15) | 156.8 |
O2—H4···Cl1 | 0.79 (6) | 2.22 (6) | 3.0080 (19) | 172 (4) |
C2—H21···O1iv | 1.00 | 2.39 | 3.292 (2) | 150.2 |
C2—H21···O1iii | 1.00 | 2.55 | 3.216 (2) | 123.7 |
Symmetry codes: (i) x, y+1, z−1; (ii) x, y, z−1; (iii) −x+3/2, y+1/2, −z+1; (iv) x, y+1, z. |
Experimental details
Crystal data | |
Chemical formula | C6H14N2O4Se22+·2(Cl−) |
Mr | 407.02 |
Crystal system, space group | Monoclinic, C2 |
Temperature (K) | 100 |
a, b, c (Å) | 18.8045 (16), 5.2529 (4), 7.2719 (6) |
β (°) | 102.219 (1) |
V (Å3) | 702.03 (10) |
Z | 2 |
Radiation type | Mo Kα |
µ (mm−1) | 5.65 |
Crystal size (mm) | 0.85 × 0.08 × 0.07 |
Data collection | |
Diffractometer | Bruker D8 Advance single-crystal CCD diffractometer |
Absorption correction | Multi-scan (SADABS; Bruker, 2014) |
Tmin, Tmax | 0.514, 1.000 |
No. of measured, independent and observed [I > 2σ(I)] reflections | 11089, 4209, 4080 |
Rint | 0.024 |
(sin θ/λ)max (Å−1) | 0.908 |
Refinement | |
R[F2 > 2σ(F2)], wR(F2), S | 0.023, 0.062, 1.10 |
No. of reflections | 4209 |
No. of parameters | 78 |
No. of restraints | 3 |
H-atom treatment | H atoms treated by a mixture of independent and constrained refinement |
Δρmax, Δρmin (e Å−3) | 4.55, −0.87 |
Absolute structure | Flack x determined using 1708 quotients (Parsons et al., 2013) |
Absolute structure parameter | 0.044 (4) |
Computer programs: APEX2 (Bruker, 2014), SAINT (Bruker, 2014), SHELXT (Sheldrick, 2015a), SHELXL2014 (Sheldrick, 2015b), Mercury (Macrae et al., 2008).
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