We report light-induced reactions in at wo-chromophore system capable of sequence-independent l-orthogonal reactivity relying solely on the choice of wavelength and solvent. In as olution of water and acetonitrile,L ED irradiation at l max = 285 nm leads to full conversion of 2,5-diphenyltetrazoles with N-ethylmaleimide to the pyrazoline ligation products.S imultaneously present o-methylbenzaldehyde thioethers are retained. Conversely,L ED irradiation at l max = 382 nm is used to induce ligation of the o-methylbenzaldehydes in acetonitrile with N-ethylmaleimide via o-quinodimethanes, while 2,5-diphenyltetrazoles also present are retained. This unprecedented photochemical selectivity is achieved through control of the number and wavelength of incident photons as well as favorable optical properties and quantum yields of the reactants in their environment.
Photoinducedligationreactionsinaone-potsystemthatcanbe controlled by the choice of irradiation wavelength without the need for additives or catalysts are highly desirable tools in the fields of organic, biological, and macromolecular chemistry as well as materials science.Until recently,this orthogonality,a lso described as l-orthogonality, [1] wavelength selectivity, [2] or chromatic orthogonality, [3] has-with the exception of photocleavage or photodeprotection systems, [4] the use of additional protecting groups, [5] added catalysts, [6] release from plasmon resonant liposomes, [7] and photoisomerization systems (photo switches) [3,8] -been achieved in only asequencedependent fashion. [1,2, 9] Clearly,t he design of ac atalyst-free, sequence-independent orthogonal ligation system is af ormidable challenge. [10] Generally,s equence-dependent l-orthogonality is possible,i fo ne photoactivatable chromophore absorbs light in ar egion of the ultraviolet-visible spectrum where the other chromophore does not absorb (long-wavelength irradiation induces the first reaction). Thei nverted order (short-wavelength irradiation induces the first reaction) of photoreactions usually results in undesired nonselective activation of both chromophores.I n2 000, Bochet and coworkers introduced ap air of protecting groups that can be cleaved with different wavelengths in ao ne-pot system with acceptable selectivity: [4a,b] One of the photoactivatable substances was transformed with 254 nm light to 92 %c onversion, while the other photocleavable compound was retained to adegree of 83 %. In the wavelength-inverted approach, the latter substance can be transformed by 420 nm light to 93 % conversion, while 92 %o fthe first compound is retained. While this selectivity for ap hotodeprotection is notable,itis far from being quantitative and addresses bond cleavage rather than formation. Examples that show control over ligation reactions with different colors of light without the limitation of sequence dependence are scarce:I tw as shown indirectly by combining av isible-light-triggered "off switch" of athermal ligation reaction with aUV-light-induced ligation reaction. [11] Orthogonal la...