98%
921
2 minutes
20
From a dicyano-phenylenevinylene (PV) and an azobenzene (AB) skeleton, two new symmetrical salen dyes were obtained. Terminal bulky substituents able to reduce intermolecular interactions and flexible tails to guarantee solubility were added to the fluorogenic cores. Photochemical performances were investigated on the small molecules in solution, as neat crystals and as dopants in polymeric matrixes. High fluorescence quantum yield in the orange-red region was observed for the brightest emissive films (88% yield). The spectra of absorption and fluorescence were predicted by Density Functional Theory (DFT) calculations. The predicted energy levels of the frontier orbitals are in good agreement with voltammetry and molecular spectroscopy measures. Employing the two dyes as dopants of a nematic polymer led to remarkable orange or yellow luminescence, which dramatically decreases in on-off switch mode after liquid crystal (LC) order was lost. The fluorogenic cores were also embedded in organic polymers and self-assembly zinc coordination networks to transfer the emission properties to a macro-system. The final polymers emit from red to yellow both in solution and in the solid state and their photoluminescence (PL) performance are, in some cases, enhanced when compared to the fluorogenic cores.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6780212 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym11091379 | DOI Listing |
JACS Au
August 2024
CRI Center for Chemical Proteomics, Department of Chemistry, Seoul National University, Seoul 08826, Korea.
Novel fluorescent scaffolds are highly demanding for a wide range of applications in biomedical investigation. To meet this demand, the pyrido[3,2-]indolizine scaffold was designed as a versatile organic fluorophore. With the aid of computational modeling, fluorophores offering tunable emission colors (blue to red) were constructed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSmall
October 2024
Faculty of Chemistry, Jagiellonian University, Gronostajowa 2, Krakow, 30-387, Poland.
Polymer nanocapsules with hydrophobic cores are promising candidates for nanoreactors to carry out (bio)chemical reactions mimicking the performance of natural cellular systems. Their architecture allows reagents to be encapsulated in the cores enabling reactions to proceed in confined environments in a controlled, and efficient manner. Polysaccharide-shell oil-core nanocapsules are proposed here as facile mergeable nanoreactors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Chem Soc
April 2024
Department of Chemistry, State Key Laboratory of Molecular Engineering of Polymers, Shanghai Key Laboratory of Molecular Catalysis and Innovative Materials and iChem, Fudan University, Shanghai 200433, China.
Chemigenetic fusion of synthetic dyes with genetically encoded protein tags presents a promising avenue for in vivo imaging. However, its full potential has been hindered by the lack of bright and fluorogenic dyes operating in the "tissue transparency" near-infrared window (NIR, 700-1700 nm). Here, we report 2X-rhodamine (2XR), a novel bright scaffold that allows for the development of live-cell-compatible, NIR-excited variants with strong fluorogenicity beyond 1000 nm.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Chem Soc
February 2024
Department of Pharmacy, LMU Munich, Butenandtstr. 5-13, Munich 81377, Germany.
We report piperazine-fused six-membered-cyclic disulfides as redox substrates that unlock best-in-class bioreduction probes for live cell biology, since their self-immolation after reduction is unprecedentedly rapid. We develop scalable, diastereomerically pure, six-step syntheses that access four key - and -piperazine-fused cyclic dichalcogenides without chromatography. Fluorogenic redox probes using the disulfide piperazines are activated >100-fold faster than the prior art monoamines, allowing us to deconvolute reduction and cyclization rates during activation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
May 2023
Biochemistry and Biophysics Center, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, USA.
Beetroot is a homodimeric in vitro selected RNA that binds and activates DFAME, a conditional fluorophore derived from GFP. It is 70% sequence-identical to the previously characterized homodimeric aptamer Corn, which binds one molecule of its cognate fluorophore DFHO at its interprotomer interface. We have now determined the Beetroot-DFAME co-crystal structure at 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF