We introduce a new economic, convenient and general assay principle based on the reversible interaction of water-soluble macrocycles and fluorescent dyes. We show that amino acid decarboxylase activity can be continuously monitored by measuring changes in fluorescence, which result from the competition of the enzymatic product and the dye for forming a complex with a cucurbituril or calixarene macrocycle. The new assay provides a complementary method to the use of antibodies, radioactive markers and labeled substrates.
A combination of moderately selective host-guest binding with the impressive specificity of enzymatic transformations allows the real-time monitoring of enzymatic reactions in a homogeneous solution. The resulting enzyme assays ("supramolecular tandem assays") exploit the dynamic binding of a fluorescent dye with a macrocyclic host in competition with the binding of the substrate and product. Two examples of enzymatic reactions were investigated: the hydrolysis of arginine to ornithine catalyzed by arginase and the oxidation of cadaverine to 5-aminopentanal by diamine oxidase, in which the substrates have a higher affinity to the macrocycle than the products ("substrate-selective assays"). The depletion of the substrate allows the fluorescent dye to enter the macrocycle in the course of the enzymatic reaction, which leads to the desired fluorescence response. For arginase, p-sulfonatocalix[4]arene was used as the macrocycle, which displayed binding constants of 6400 M(-1) with arginine, 550 M(-1) with ornithine, and 60,000 M(-1) with the selected fluorescent dye (1-aminomethyl-2,3-diazabicyclo[2.2.2]oct-2-ene); the dye shows a weaker fluorescence in its complexed state, which leads to a switch-off fluorescence response in the course of the enzymatic reaction. For diamine oxidase, cucurbit[7]uril (CB7) was used as the macrocycle, which showed binding constants of 4.5 x 10(6) M(-1) with cadaverine, 1.1 x 10(5) M(-1) with 1-aminopentane (as a model for the thermally unstable 1-aminopentanal), and 2.9 x 10(5) M(-1) with the selected fluorescent dye (acridine orange, AO); AO shows a stronger fluorescence in its complexed state, which leads to a switch-on fluorescence response upon enzymatic oxidation. It is demonstrated that tandem assays can be successfully used to probe the inhibition of enzymes. Inhibition constants were estimated for the addition of known inhibitors, i.e., S-(2-boronoethyl)-L-cysteine and 2(S)-amino-6-boronohexanoic acid for arginase and potassium cyanide for diamine oxidase. Through the sequential coupling of a "product-selective" with a "substrate-selective" assay it was furthermore possible to monitor a multistep biochemical pathway, namely the decarboxylation of lysine to cadaverine by lysine decarboxylase followed by the oxidation of cadaverine by diamine oxidase. This "domino tandem assay" was performed in the same solution with a single reporter pair (CB7/AO).
The fluorescent azoalkane, 2,3‐diazabicyclo[2.2.2]oct‐2‐ene (DBO), forms inclusion complexes with p‐sulfonatocalix[4]arene (CX4). The binding constants are on the order of 103 M–1 in water. The addition of CX4 to DBO solutions results in an efficient fluorescence quenching (up to 90 %). This supramolecular system can be used as a truly water‐soluble sensor system to signal the binding of organic ammonium ions over a large pH range. Addition of choline and carnitine derivatives and tetraalkylammonium ions results in regeneration of this fluorescence, from which the binding constants (KC = 103–105 M–1) are calculated by means of a competitive complexation model. Electrostatic effects are observed, namely, a more‐than‐one order of magnitude weaker binding of the carnitines in neutral solution.
The pD dependence of the complexation of p-sulfonatocalix[4]arene (CX4) with the azoalkanes 2,3-diazabicyclo[2.2.1]hept-2-ene (1), 2,3-diazabicyclo[2.2.2]oct-2-ene (2), 2,3-diazabicyclo[2.2.3]non-2-ene (3), and 1-methyl-4-isopropyl-2,3-diazabicyclo[2.2.2]oct-2-ene (4) in D(2)O has been studied. The pD-dependent binding constants, determined by (1)H NMR spectroscopy, were analyzed according to a seven-state model, which included the CX4 tetra- and penta-anions, the protonated and unprotonated forms of the azoalkanes, the corresponding complexes, as well as the complex formed between CX4 and the deuteriated hydronium ion. The variation of the UV absorption spectra, namely the hypsochromic shift in the near-UV band of the azo chromophore upon protonation, was analyzed according to a four-state model. Measurements by independent methods demonstrated that complexation by CX4 shifts the pK(a) values of the guest molecules by around 2 units, thereby establishing a case of host-assisted guest protonation. The pK(a) shift can be translated into improved binding (factor of 100) of the protonated guest relative to its unprotonated form as a result of the cation-receptor properties of CX4. The results are discussed in the context of supramolecular catalytic activity and the pK(a) shifts induced by different types of macrocyclic hosts are compared.
A new working principle for detecting inorganic cation binding by water-soluble calix[4]arenes involves the displacement of a fluorescent azoalkane as guest. Fluorescence regeneration is observed for various metal ions, and binding of monovalent cations (alkali and ammonium) to p-sulfonatocalix[4]arene is detected and quantified for the first time.
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