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Semiquantitative Visual Chiral Assay with a Pseudoenantiomeric Fluorescent Sensor Pair.

Yu ChenFeng ZhaoJun TianLe JiangKai LuYixuan JiangHang LiShanshan YuXiao-Qi YuLin Pu
Published in: The Journal of organic chemistry (2021)
A new red-light-emitting fluorescent probe (R)-5 was synthesized. In the presence of Zn2+, this compound was found to exhibit good enantioselective fluorescence enhancement at λ = 655 nm when treated with a variety of amino acids in aqueous solution. This probe in combination with a green-light-emitting probe (S)-4 that has enantioselective fluorescence enhancement at λ = 505 nm has formed a pseudoenantiomeric sensor pair because of their opposite enantioselectivities. This sensor pair can simultaneously detect both enantiomers of a chiral amino acid at two very different wavelengths (Δ = 150 nm). It was used to visually and semiquantitatively determine the enantiomeric compositions of amino acids. For example, when a 1:1 mixture of (R)-5 and (S)-4 was treated with Zn(OAc)2 and histidine samples of 0-100% [d-His], the color of the mixtures changed from green to yellow, orange, and red under a UV lamp (365 nm), which allowed a quick quantification of [d-His]%. This is the first example of using fluorescence to visually quantify the enantiomeric composition of chiral compounds.
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