Carbocations are short-lived reactive intermediates in many organic and biological reactions that are difficult to observe. This field sprung to life with the discovery by Olah that a superacidic solution allowed the successful capture and nuclear magnetic resonance characterization of transient carbocations. We report here that water microdroplets can directly capture the fleeting carbocation from a reaction aliquot followed by its desorption to the gas phase for mass spectrometric detection. This was accomplished by employing desorption electrospray ionization mass spectrometry to detect a variety of short-lived carbocations (average lifetime ranges from nanoseconds to picoseconds) obtained from different reactions (e.g., elimination, substitution, and oxidation). Solvent-dependent studies revealed that aqueous microdroplets outperform organic microdroplets in the capture of carbocations. We provide a mechanistic insight demonstrating the survival of the reactive carbocation in a positively charged aqueous microdroplet and its subsequent ejection to the gas phase for mass spectrometric analysis.
Over the last 50 years, proposals of α-carbonyl cation intermediates have been driven by chemical intuition and indirect evidence. Recently, wide interest in α-carbonyl cation chemistry has opened new gates to prepare α-functionalized carbonyl compounds. Though these intrinsically unstable carbocations are formed under forcing conditions (e.g., in a strong acid medium), their fleeting existence prohibits direct observation or spectroscopic measurement. We report that high-speed aqueous microdroplets can directly capture α-carbonyl cation intermediates from various reactions (Friedel−Crafts arylation, deoxygenation, and azidation) upon bombarding with the corresponding reaction aliquots. The α-carbonyl cations caged in water droplets are then desorbed to the gas phase, allowing their successful measurement by mass spectrometry. This has also enabled us to simultaneously monitor the relative abundance of the associated precursor, α-carbonyl cation intermediate, and product during the progress of the reaction.
Temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) is the most prevalent form of human epilepsy, often accompanied by neurodegeneration in the hippocampus. Like other neurological diseases, TLE is expected to disrupt lipid homeostasis. However, the lipid architecture of the human TLE brain is relatively understudied, and the molecular mechanism of epileptogenesis is poorly understood. We performed desorption electrospray ionization mass spectrometry imaging of 39 fresh frozen surgical specimens of the human hippocampus to investigate lipid profiles in TLE with hippocampal sclerosis (n = 14) and control (non-TLE; n = 25) groups. In contrast to several previous studies on animal models of epilepsy, we report reduced expression of various important lipids, notably phosphatidylcholine (PC) and phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), in the human TLE hippocampus. In addition, metabolic pathway analysis suggested the possible dysregulation of the Kennedy pathway in TLE, resulting in striking reductions of PC and PE levels. This revelation opens up opportunities to further investigate the associated molecular mechanisms and possible therapeutic targets for TLE.
Carbanions appear in many organic or biological reactions as fleeting intermediates, prohibiting direct observation or spectroscopic measurement. An aqueous environment is known to rapidly annihilate a carbanion species, reducing its lifetime to as short as picoseconds. We report that aqueous microdroplets can capture and stabilize reactive carbanion intermediates isolated from four classic organic reactions, aldol and Knoevenagel condensations, alkyne alkylation, and the Reimer–Tiemann reaction, enabling the detection of their carbanion intermediates by desorption electrospray ionization mass spectrometry. This is accomplished in real time of the reaction, allowing new insights into reaction mechanisms to be obtained. The efficacy of microdroplets in capturing such elusive species was examined by varying the solvent and the microdroplet negative charge density. We observed that microdroplets composed of water–methanol outperform other solvents, such as pure water, in capturing carbanions, which is in contrast to the earlier report that presented the highest performance of pure water microdroplets in capturing carbocations. We offer some mechanistic insights to explain the discriminatory behavior of these two oppositely charged species in microdroplets.
Although phenol is stable in bulk water, we report an exceptional phenomenon in which phenol is spontaneously transformed into a phenyl carbocation (Ph+) in water microdroplets. The high electric field at the air–water interface is proposed to break the phenolic Csp2–OH bond, forming Ph+, which remains in equilibrium with phenol as deciphered by mass spectrometry. We detected up to 70% conversion of phenol to Ph+ in aqueous microdroplets, although catalyst-free activation of the phenolic Csp2–OH bond is challenging. This transformation is well tolerated by a wide range of electron-donating and -withdrawing substituents in phenolic compounds. The Ph+ in water microdroplets could be reacted with various nucleophiles (amine, pyridine, azide, thiol, carboxylic acid, alcohol, and 18O-water), yielding the ipso-substitution products of phenol through an aromatic SN1 mechanism. Despite the fleeting life of Ph+ in the bulk, this study demonstrates its unusual stability at the aqueous microdroplet surface, enabling its detection and transformation.
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