Click processes orthogonal to CuAAC and SuFEx forge selectively modifiable fluorescent linkers.
Paulo H S PaiotiKatherine E LounsburyFilippo RomitiMichele FormicaValentin BauerClaudio ZandonellaMeagan E HackeyJuan Del PozoAmir H HoveydaPublished in: Nature chemistry (2023)
The appeal of catalytic click chemistry is largely due to the copper-catalysed azide-alkyne cycloaddition (CuAAC) process, which is orthogonal to the more recently introduced sulfur-fluoride exchange (SuFEx). However, the triazole rings generated by CuAAC are not readily modifiable, and SuFEx connectors cannot be selectively functionalized, attributes that would be attractive in a click process. Here we introduce bisphosphine-copper-catalysed phenoxydiazaborinine formation (CuPDF), a link-and-in situ modify strategy for merging a nitrile, an allene, a diborane and a hydrazine. We also present copper- and palladium-catalysed quinoline formation (Cu/PdQNF), which is applicable in aqueous media, involving an aniline as the modifier. CuPDF and Cu/PdQNF are easy to perform and deliver robust, alterable and tunable fluorescent hubs. CuPDF and Cu/PdQNF are orthogonal to SuFEx and CuAAC, despite the latter and CuPDF also being catalysed by an organocopper species. These advantages were applied to protecting group-free syntheses of sequence-defined branched oligomers, a chemoselectively amendable polymer, three drug conjugates and a two-drug conjugate.
Keyphrases
- quantum dots
- oxide nanoparticles
- living cells
- aqueous solution
- fluorescent probe
- metal organic framework
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- reduced graphene oxide
- mass spectrometry
- crystal structure
- amino acid
- liquid chromatography
- light emitting