The carbon–silicon switch strategy has become a key technique for structural optimization of drugs to widen the chemical space, increase drug activity against targeted proteins, and generate novel and patentable lead compounds. Flubeneteram, targeting succinate dehydrogenase (SDH), is a promising fungicide candidate recently developed in China. We describe the synthesis of novel SDH inhibitors with enhanced fungicidal activity to enlarge the chemical space of flubeneteram by employing the C–Si switch strategy. Several of the thus formed flubeneteram-silyl derivatives exhibited improved fungicidal activity against porcine SDH compared with the lead compound flubeneteram and the positive controls. Disease control experiments conducted in a greenhouse showed that trimethyl-silyl-substituted compound W2 showed comparable and even higher fungicidal activities compared to benzovindiflupyr and flubeneteram, respectively, even with a low concentration of 0.19 mg/L for soybean rust control. Furthermore, compound W2 encouragingly performed slightly better control than azoxystrobin and was less active than benzovindiflupyr at the concentration of 100 mg/L against soybean rust in field trials. The computational results showed that the silyl-substituted phenyl moiety in W2 could form strong van der Waals (VDW) interactions with SDH. Our results indicate that the C–Si switch strategy is an effective method for the development of novel SDH inhibitors.
Although metallacycle‐based supramolecular photosensitizers (PSs) have attracted increasing attention in biomedicine, their clinical translation is still hindered by their inherent dark toxicity. Herein, we report what to our knowledge is the first example of a molecular engineering approach to building blocks of metallacycles for constructing a series of supramolecular PSs (RuA–RuD), with the aim of simultaneously reducing dark toxicity and enhancing phototoxicity, and consequently obtaining high phototoxicity indexes (PI). Detailed in vitro investigations demonstrate that RuA–RuD display high cancer cellular uptake and remarkable antitumor activity even under hypoxic conditions. Notably, RuD exhibited no dark toxicity and displayed the highest PI value (≈406). Theoretical calculations verified that RuD has the largest steric hindrance and the lowest singlet‐triplet energy gap (ΔEST, 0.61 eV). Further in vivo studies confirmed that RuD allows safe and effective phototherapy against A549 tumors.
Pesticide residues, significantly hampering the overall environmental and human health, have become an increasingly severe issue. Thus, developing rapid, cost-effective, and sensitive tools for monitoring the pesticide residues in food and water is extremely important. Compared to the conventional and chromatographic techniques, enzyme inhibition-based biosensors conjugated with the fluorogenic probes provide effective alternative methods for detecting pesticide residues due to the inherent advantages including high selectivity and sensitivity, simple operation, and capability of providing in situ and real-time information. However, the detection efficiency of a single enzyme-targeted biosensor in practical samples is strongly impeded by the structural diversity of pesticides and their distinct targets. In this work, we developed a strategy of multienzyme-targeted fluorescent probe design and accordingly obtained a novel fluorescent probe (named as 3CP) for detecting the presence of wide variety of pesticides. The designed probe 3CP, targeting cholinesterases, carboxylesterases, and chymotrypsin simultaneously, yielded intense fluorescence in the solid state upon the enzyme-catalyzed hydrolysis. It showed excellent sensitivity against organophosphorus and carbamate pesticides, and the detection limit for dichlorvos achieved 1.14 pg/L. Moreover, it allowed for the diffusion-resistant in situ visualization of pesticides in live cells and zebrafish and the sensitive measurement of organophosphorus pesticides in fresh vegetables, demonstrating the promising potential for tracking the pesticide residues in environment and biological systems.
As a modern biomedical therapeutic modality, sonodynamic therapy (SDT) presents unique advantages, including superior tissue penetration capability, temporal-spatial controllability, and negligible side effects. However, the bottlenecks of most organic sonosensitizers are their short emission wavelengths, strong phototoxicity, and unsatisfactory SDT effect, which undermines the precise fluorescence imaging-guided SDT in vivo. Here, a long-wavelength emissive and mitochondria-targeted organic nanosonosensitizer, named CCNU980 nanoparticles (NPs), is rationally designed, which possesses deep-tissue optical penetration (up to 6 mm), depth-activated ROS production (up to 8 cm), high photostability, and low phototoxicity. In vitro studies verify CCNU980 NPs selectively enriches in cancer cells with the ability to target the mitochondria and induce mitochondria-mediated apoptosis using abundant 1 O 2 under US irradiation. Notably, CCNU980 NPs enables precise in vivo NIR-II fluorescence imaging-guided SDT, accompanied by the suppression of the bilateral 4T1 tumor growth with minimal side effects. The current work can inspire a general strategy for the design of organic nanosonosensitizers with long-wavelength emission and new thoughts for precision medicine.
Pesticides are widely used agrochemicals for crop protection. The need for novel pesticides becomes urgent as a result of the emergence of resistance and environmental toxicity. Pesticide informatics has been applied in different phase processes of pesticide target identification, active ingredient design, and impact evaluation. However, these valuable resources are scattered over the literature and web, limiting their availability. Here, we summarize and connect research on pesticide informatics resources. A pesticide informatics platform (PIP) was constructed to share these tools. We finally discuss the future direction of pesticide informatics, including pesticide contamination. We expect to share the pesticide informatics approaches and stimulate further research.
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