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Photochemical syntheses, transformations, and bioorthogonal chemistry of trans-cycloheptene and sila trans-cycloheptene Ag(i) complexes

A photochemical synthesis of AgNO(3) complexes of trans-cycloheptene (TCH) and trans-1-sila-4-cycloheptene (Si-TCH) derivatives is described. A low temperature flow photoreactor was designed to enable the synthesis of carbocyclic TCH derivatives due to their thermal sensitivity in the absence of met...

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Autores principales: Fang, Yinzhi, Zhang, Han, Huang, Zhen, Scinto, Samuel L., Yang, Jeffrey C., am Ende, Christopher W., Dmitrenko, Olga, Johnson, Douglas S., Fox, Joseph M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Royal Society of Chemistry 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5892336/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29675242
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c7sc04773h
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author Fang, Yinzhi
Zhang, Han
Huang, Zhen
Scinto, Samuel L.
Yang, Jeffrey C.
am Ende, Christopher W.
Dmitrenko, Olga
Johnson, Douglas S.
Fox, Joseph M.
author_facet Fang, Yinzhi
Zhang, Han
Huang, Zhen
Scinto, Samuel L.
Yang, Jeffrey C.
am Ende, Christopher W.
Dmitrenko, Olga
Johnson, Douglas S.
Fox, Joseph M.
author_sort Fang, Yinzhi
collection PubMed
description A photochemical synthesis of AgNO(3) complexes of trans-cycloheptene (TCH) and trans-1-sila-4-cycloheptene (Si-TCH) derivatives is described. A low temperature flow photoreactor was designed to enable the synthesis of carbocyclic TCH derivatives due to their thermal sensitivity in the absence of metal coordination. Unlike the free carbocycles, TCH·AgNO(3) complexes can be handled at rt and stored for weeks in the freezer (–18 °C). Si-TCH·AgNO(3) complexes are especially robust, and are bench stable for days at rt, and for months in the freezer. X-ray crystallography was used to characterize a Si-TCH·AgNO(3) complex for the first time. With decomplexation of AgNO(3)in situ, metal-free TCO and Si-TCH derivatives can engage in a range of cycloaddition reactions as well as dihydroxylation reactions. Computation was used to predict that Si-TCH would engage in bioorthogonal reactions that are more rapid than the most reactive trans-cyclooctenes. Metal-free Si-TCH derivatives were shown to display good stability in solution, and to engage in the fastest bioorthogonal reaction reported to date (k(2) 1.14 × 10(7) M(–1) s(–1) in 9 : 1 H(2)O : MeOH). Utility in bioorthogonal protein labeling in live cells is described, including labeling of GFP with an unnatural tetrazine-containing amino acid. The reactivity and specificity of the Si-TCH reagents with tetrazines in live mammalian cells was also evaluated using the HaloTag platform. The cell labeling experiments show that Si-TCH derivatives are best suited as probe molecules in the cellular environment.
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spelling pubmed-58923362018-04-19 Photochemical syntheses, transformations, and bioorthogonal chemistry of trans-cycloheptene and sila trans-cycloheptene Ag(i) complexes Fang, Yinzhi Zhang, Han Huang, Zhen Scinto, Samuel L. Yang, Jeffrey C. am Ende, Christopher W. Dmitrenko, Olga Johnson, Douglas S. Fox, Joseph M. Chem Sci Chemistry A photochemical synthesis of AgNO(3) complexes of trans-cycloheptene (TCH) and trans-1-sila-4-cycloheptene (Si-TCH) derivatives is described. A low temperature flow photoreactor was designed to enable the synthesis of carbocyclic TCH derivatives due to their thermal sensitivity in the absence of metal coordination. Unlike the free carbocycles, TCH·AgNO(3) complexes can be handled at rt and stored for weeks in the freezer (–18 °C). Si-TCH·AgNO(3) complexes are especially robust, and are bench stable for days at rt, and for months in the freezer. X-ray crystallography was used to characterize a Si-TCH·AgNO(3) complex for the first time. With decomplexation of AgNO(3)in situ, metal-free TCO and Si-TCH derivatives can engage in a range of cycloaddition reactions as well as dihydroxylation reactions. Computation was used to predict that Si-TCH would engage in bioorthogonal reactions that are more rapid than the most reactive trans-cyclooctenes. Metal-free Si-TCH derivatives were shown to display good stability in solution, and to engage in the fastest bioorthogonal reaction reported to date (k(2) 1.14 × 10(7) M(–1) s(–1) in 9 : 1 H(2)O : MeOH). Utility in bioorthogonal protein labeling in live cells is described, including labeling of GFP with an unnatural tetrazine-containing amino acid. The reactivity and specificity of the Si-TCH reagents with tetrazines in live mammalian cells was also evaluated using the HaloTag platform. The cell labeling experiments show that Si-TCH derivatives are best suited as probe molecules in the cellular environment. Royal Society of Chemistry 2018-01-08 /pmc/articles/PMC5892336/ /pubmed/29675242 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c7sc04773h Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2018 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/This article is freely available. This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence (CC BY 3.0)
spellingShingle Chemistry
Fang, Yinzhi
Zhang, Han
Huang, Zhen
Scinto, Samuel L.
Yang, Jeffrey C.
am Ende, Christopher W.
Dmitrenko, Olga
Johnson, Douglas S.
Fox, Joseph M.
Photochemical syntheses, transformations, and bioorthogonal chemistry of trans-cycloheptene and sila trans-cycloheptene Ag(i) complexes
title Photochemical syntheses, transformations, and bioorthogonal chemistry of trans-cycloheptene and sila trans-cycloheptene Ag(i) complexes
title_full Photochemical syntheses, transformations, and bioorthogonal chemistry of trans-cycloheptene and sila trans-cycloheptene Ag(i) complexes
title_fullStr Photochemical syntheses, transformations, and bioorthogonal chemistry of trans-cycloheptene and sila trans-cycloheptene Ag(i) complexes
title_full_unstemmed Photochemical syntheses, transformations, and bioorthogonal chemistry of trans-cycloheptene and sila trans-cycloheptene Ag(i) complexes
title_short Photochemical syntheses, transformations, and bioorthogonal chemistry of trans-cycloheptene and sila trans-cycloheptene Ag(i) complexes
title_sort photochemical syntheses, transformations, and bioorthogonal chemistry of trans-cycloheptene and sila trans-cycloheptene ag(i) complexes
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5892336/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29675242
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c7sc04773h
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