The 2,5-diaminoterephthalate structural motif is a powerful chromophore with remarkable fluorescence properties. Containing two carboxylate and two amino functions, it defines a colored molecular scaffold which allows for orthogonal functionalization with different functional units. Therefore, different applications in life sciences and materials science could be addressed. In this study, the two amino functions were alkylated by reductive amination with side chains carrying amino (orthogonally protected as Boc or Alloc) and carboxylate functions (orthogonally protected as tBu or allyl ester). After sequential deprotections, functional units were introduced by amidation reactions. As three examples, the chromophore was coupled with retinoic acid and fullerene C in order to obtain a triad for studying photoinduced electron transfer processes. Furthermore, cyclooctyne and azide moieties were introduced as functional units, allowing for ligation by click reactions. These two clickable groups were applied in combination with maleimide units which are reactive toward thiol residues. The latter dyes define so-called "turn on" probes, since the fluorescence quantum yields increased by one order of magnitude upon reaction with the molecular target.
Derivatives of 2,5‐diaminoterephthalate (DAT) are efficient fluorescence dyes that are also redox‐active, thus allowing for the electrochemical manipulation of spectral properties. The electrochemical behaviour of seven DAT derivatives was studied by cyclic voltammetry in dichloromethane. In the absence of a proton donor, DATs should be oxidized in two one‐electron steps. The first step is usually quasi‐reversible while the second step is either quasi‐reversible or irreversible. Some electrochemical properties such as the formal potentials and the ratio between the anodic and the cathodic current were determined from the cyclic voltammograms. Correlation between the formal potential of first oxidation and the absorption or the fluorescence emission wavelengths are established for this specific type of dyes. These correlations were confirmed with density functional theory calculations.
A self-assembled monolayer (SAM) on gold was prepared from a diaminoterephthalate (DAT) derivative as functional molecule and 1-decanthiol as a backfiller. The DAT derivative is N-protected by a tert-butyloxycarbonyl (Boc) group and is anchored to the gold surface via a liponic acid as a stable anchor group. The terminal DAT moiety exhibits interesting effector properties such as fluorescence and electrochemical activity. Irreversible oxidation of the monolayer at 0.4 V (Hg|Hg2SO4) in 0.1 M HClO4 triggers deprotection of the DAT group and subsequent chemical reactions, during which 10% of the DAT groups of the original SAM are transformed to a new surface-bound, quasi-reversible redox couple with a formal potential of 0.0 V (Hg|Hg2SO4) and a standard rate constant of 8 s–1 in 0.1 M HClO4. Immersion of the mixed SAM in 0.1 M HClO4 at open circuit potential or oxidation in 0.1 M H2SO4 did not produce this surface-bound redox couple. The monolayers were thoroughly characterized by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and polarization modulation infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy (PM IRRAS) after the different preparation steps indicating only minor changes in the overall composition of the monolayer, in particular, the preservation of the heteroatoms. The new redox couple is likely a diimine, in agreement with its ability to bind nucleophiles such as anilines by conjugate addition that could be followed by multicycle voltammetry and XPS. The DAT effector group is especially interesting because it can also report the binding reaction by changed electrochemical and fluorescence signals.
Two bifunctional diaminoterephthalate (DAT) fluorescence dyes were prepared in a three-step sequence including one deprotection reaction. One functional unit is α-lipoic acid (ALA) for binding the dye to gold surfaces. It was introduced to the DAT scaffold by an amidation reaction. The other functional unit is a para-(trifluoromethyl)benzyl group for facile detection of the surface-bound material by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). This residue was introduced by reductive amination of the DAT scaffold with the respective benzaldehyde derivative. In one compound (60% yield over three steps) the ALA unit is directly bound to the DAT as a relatively electron-withdrawing amide. In solution (CH2Cl2), this material shows strong fluorescence (quantum yield 57% with emission at 495 nm, absorption maximum at 420 nm). The other compound (57% yield over three steps) possesses a propylene spacer between the ALA and the DAT units for electronic decoupling, thus, bathochromic shifts are observed (absorption at 514 nm, emission at 566 nm). The quantum yield is, however, lower (4%). Self-assembled monolayers on a gold surface of both compounds were prepared and characterized by high-resolution XPS of the C 1s, O 1s, S 2p, N 1s and F 1s emissions. The high signal-to-noise ratios of the F 1s peaks indicated that trifluoromethylation is an excellent tool for the detection of surface-bound materials by XPS.
The Cover Feature shows a quite strict correlation which was found between the redox potential and the spectroscopic properties of asymmetrically derivatized 2,5‐diaminoterephthalates (DAT). This correlation allows for the tuning of the redox and emission behaviors of those dyes, or the observation of effector binding to the chromophore. More information can be found in the Full Paper by A. Markovic et al. on page 1176 in Issue 9, 2019 (DOI: 10.1002/open.201900138).
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