Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Strain-promoted azide-alkyne cycloaddition (SPAAC) as a conjugation tool has found broad application in material sciences, chemical biology and even in vivo use. However, despite tremendous effort, SPAAC remains fairly slow (0.2-0.5 M(-1) s(-1)) and efforts to increase reaction rates by tailoring of cyclooctyne structure have suffered from a poor trade-off between cyclooctyne reactivity and stability. We here wish to report tremendous acceleration of strain-promoted cycloaddition of an aliphatic cyclooctyne (bicyclo[6.1.0]non-4-yne, BCN) with electron-deficient aryl azides, with reaction rate constants reaching 2.0-2.9 M(-1) s(-1). A remarkable difference in rate constants of aliphatic cyclooctynes versus benzoannulated cyclooctynes is noted, enabling a next level of orthogonality by a judicious choice of azide-cyclooctyne combinations, which is inter alia applied in one-pot three-component protein labelling. The pivotal role of azide electronegativity is explained by density-functional theory calculations and electronic-structure analyses, which indicates an inverse electron-demand mechanism is operative with an aliphatic cyclooctyne.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ncomms6378DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

inverse electron-demand
8
aliphatic cyclooctynes
8
aliphatic cyclooctyne
8
rate constants
8
highly accelerated
4
accelerated inverse
4
electron-demand cycloaddition
4
cycloaddition electron-deficient
4
electron-deficient azides
4
aliphatic
4

Similar Publications

Small-molecule metabolic chemical probes are tailored chemical biology tools that are designed to detect and visualize biological processes within a cell or an organism. Nucleoside analogues are a subset of metabolic probes that enable the study of DNA synthesis, proliferation kinetics, and cell cycle progression. However, most available nucleoside analogue probes have been designed for use in mammalian cells, limiting their use in other species, where there are metabolic pathway differences.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The Diels-Alder/cheletropic retro-[4+1] cycloadditions of thiophene S,S-dioxides are a prominent method for synthesizing unsaturated six-membered carbocycles. However, to the best of our knowledge, catalytic asymmetric variations of these reactions have not yet been achieved. Herein, we report Fe(III)-bis(oxazoline) complex-catalyzed inverse-electron-demand [4+2] cycloaddition/cheletropic retro-[4+1] extrusion of SO reactions between thiophene S,S-dioxides and 3-substituted indoles.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The development of the first Pt(II) tetrazine complex, trans-[Pt(II)Cl(dmso)(CH-Tz-Bz-NH)] (1), is reported, which exhibits good in vitro cytotoxicity against MDA-MB-231 cells and succesfully undergoes inverse electron demand Diels-Alder (IEDDA) reactions with trans-cyclooctene (TCO) and bicyclononyne (BCN) derivates in solution. We demonstrate a live-cell IEDDA reaction of 1 with a BF-azadipyrromethene fluorophore (NIR-AZA) posessing a BCN handle. A live-cell bioorthogonal reaction is established using fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM), through a fluorescence lifetime change of 0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Aqueous Synthesis of Poly(ethylene glycol)-amide-Norbornene-Carboxylate for Modular Hydrogel Crosslinking.

Adv Mater Interfaces

January 2025

Weldon School of Biomedical Engineering, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, USA.

Poly(ethylene glycol)-norbornene (e.g., PEGNB) is a versatile macromer amenable to step-growth thiol-norbornene photopolymerization and inverse electron demand Diels-Alder (iEDDA) click reaction.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

As a promising approach, in vivo pretargeting can leverage the unique tumor-targeting properties of antibodies for nuclear imaging and therapy while bypassing their pharmacokinetic limitations. The core premise of pretargeting is that targeted vectors and radioisotopes are administered separately, leading to a higher target background ratio than traditional imaging methods using long-lived radionuclides. This strategy directly relies on chemical reactions, namely bioorthogonal reactions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF