Carbazole/cyanobenzene photocatalysts promote the direct isotopic carboxylate exchange of C(sp 3 )-acids with labelled CO2. Substrates that are not compatible with transition metal catalyzed degradation-reconstruction approaches or prone to thermally induced reversible decarboxylation undergo isotopic incorporation at room temperature in short reaction times. The radiolabelling of drug molecules and precursors with [ 11 C]CO2 is demonstrated.The synthesis of isotopically labelled molecules is essential to drug development and nuclear medicine. As drug candidates move towards clinical research and human trials, absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion (ADME) studies require compounds enriched with long-lived radioisotopes like 3 H and 14 C. 1 Positron emission tomography (PET) techniques that probe the advance of disease states and can determine the efficacy of drug treatment require molecular targets radiolabelled with short-lived positron-emitting isotopes such as 11 C or 18 F. 2 The limited availability and high cost of isotopically enriched precursors make the preparation of complex targets challenging. For PET studies, compounds must be synthesized and purified within a few half-lives of the radiolabel ( 11 C t1/2 = 20.3 minutes). Approaches that selectively introduce isotopic labels from feedstock sources with compatibility towards common structural motifs found in clinical candidates will have a positive impact on both drug discovery efforts and medical imaging.Metal-catalyzed 1 H/ 3 H exchange is widely used in drug development to introduce long-lived radiolabels into target molecules. [3][4][5][6][7][8][9] The loss of 3 H labels through (bio)chemical reactions and metabolic shifting due to primary kinetic isotope effects are liabilities of 3 H-labelling approachs. 10-11 ADME tracer compounds with greater stability can be obtained by using 14 C radiolabels. 12 Similarly, 11 C-isotopologues of native bioactive molecules enable PET probe generation without changes to their biological or pharmacological properties. 13 The incorporation of 14 C, 13 C or 11 C (*C) units into drug molecules or precursors by the formation of a *C-C bond is challenging and often requires revised synthetic pathways to introduce the label from *CO, 14-18 *CH3I, [19][20] or other small molecules derived by reduction of *CO2. [21][22][23][24][25] The direct exchange of carboxylate groups with CO2 offers the potential for simple and cost-effective syntheses of C-labelled small molecules, particularly as CO2 (or BaCO3) is the feedstock for all radiolabelled carbon-based precursors. 26 The easy conversion of carboxylic acids into other common functionalities (esters, amides, ketones, alcohols) makes this an attractive tactic for isotope incorporation.The use of redox active hydroxyphthalimide ester substrates in combination with Ni-based mediators and stoichiometric metal reductants enables carboxylate groups to undergo net exchange with CO2 (Fig 1A ). [27][28] These reactions are limited to primary alkyl or cyclic secondary a...
2‐(2’‐Hydroxyphenyl)benzazole (HBX) fluorophores are well‐known excited‐state intramolecular proton transfer (ESIPT) emitters largely studied for their synthetic versatility, photostability, strong solid‐state fluorescence and ability to engineer dual emission, thus paving the way to applications as white emitters, ratiometric sensors, and cryptographic dyes. However, they are heavily quenched in solution, due to efficient non‐radiative pathways taking place as a consequence of the proton transfer in the excited‐state. In this contribution, the nature of the heteroring constitutive of these rigidified HBX dyes was modified and we demonstrate that this simple structural modification triggers major optical changes in terms of emission color, dual emission engineering, and importantly, fluorescent quantum yield. Investigation of the photophysical properties in solution and in the solid state of a series of ethynyl‐TIPS extended HBX fluorophores, along with ab initio calculations demonstrate the very promising abilities of these dyes to act as bright dual‐state emitters, in both solution (even in protic environments) and solid state.
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