ABSTRACT
The synthesis and characterization of asymmetric alkoxy- are reported, fluoro-benzothiadiazole (BT) acceptor core derivatized with a series of six different heterocycles (selenophene, thiophene, furan, 5-thiazole, 2-thiazole and 2-oxazole). The effect of the flanked-heterocycles containing different chalcogen atoms of the six homopolymers (HPX) is studied using optical, thermal, electrochemical, and computational analysis. Computational calculations indicate a strong relationship between the most stable conformation for each homopolymer and their bearing heterocycle, thus homopolymers HPSe', HPTp', HPFu', and HPTzC5, adopted the syn-syn and syn-anti conformations due to their noncovalent interactions with shorter distances, while HPTzC2' and HPOx' demonstrate preference for the anti-anti conformation. Optical property studies of the homopolymers reveal a strong red-shift in solution and film upon exchanging the chalcogen atom from Oxygen < Sulfur < Selenium in HPFu, HPTp, and HPSe, respectively. In addition, deeper highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO) energy levels are observed when the donor-acceptor moieties (HPSe, HPTp, and HPFu) are substituted for the acceptor-acceptor systems such as HPTzC5, HPTzC2, and HPOx. Improved packing and morphology are exhibited for the donor-acceptor homopolymers. Thus, having a flanked heterocycle containing different chalcogen-atoms in polymeric systems is one way of tuning the physicochemical properties of conjugated materials for optoelectronic applications.
Subject(s)
Chalcogens , Thiadiazoles , Chalcogens/chemistry , Oxygen/chemistryABSTRACT
An extensive polycyclic π-system with 23 fused rings is synthesized via a highly efficient borylation reaction, in which four B-N covalent bonds and four BâN coordinate bonds are formed in one pot. BâN coordinate bonds not only lock the backbone into a near-coplanar conformation but also decrease the LUMO energy level to around -3.82 eV, demonstrating the dual utility of this strategy for the synthesis of extensive rigid polycyclic molecules and the development of n-type conjugated materials for organic electronics and organic photovoltaics.
ABSTRACT
TPEN is an amino chelator of transition metals that is effective at the cellular and whole organism levels. Although TPEN of often used as a selective zinc chelators, it has affinity for copper and iron and has been shown to chelate both biologically. We have previously shown that TPEN selectively kills colon cancer cells based on its ability to chelate copper, which is highly enriched in colon cancer cells. The TPEN-copper complex is redox active thus allowing for increased ROS production in cancer cells and as such cellular toxicity. Here we generate TPEN derivatives with the goal of increasing its selectivity for copper while minimizing zinc chelation to reduce potential side effects. We show that one of these derivatives, TPEEN despite the fact that it exhibits reduced affinity for transition metals, is effective at inducing cell death in breast cancer cells, and exhibits less toxicity to normal breast cells. The toxicity effect of the both chelators coupled to the metal content of the different cell types reveals that they exhibit their toxicity through chelating redox active metals (iron and copper). As such TPEEN is an important novel chelators that can be exploited in anti-cancer therapies.
Subject(s)
Antineoplastic Agents/pharmacology , Copper/pharmacology , Ethylenediamines/pharmacology , Organometallic Compounds/pharmacology , Antineoplastic Agents/chemical synthesis , Antineoplastic Agents/chemistry , Cell Death/drug effects , Cell Proliferation/drug effects , Cells, Cultured , Copper/chemistry , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Drug Screening Assays, Antitumor , Ethylenediamines/chemistry , Humans , Molecular Structure , Organometallic Compounds/chemical synthesis , Organometallic Compounds/chemistry , Reactive Oxygen Species/metabolism , Structure-Activity RelationshipABSTRACT
Sequence-defined polymers with customizable sequences, monodispersity, substantial length, and large chemical diversity are of great interest to mimic the efficiency and selectivity of biopolymers. We report an efficient, facile, and scalable synthetic route to introduce many chemical functionalities, such as amino acids and sugars in nucleic acids and sequence-controlled oligophosphodiesters. Through achiral tertiary amine molecules that are perfectly compatible with automated DNA synthesis, readily available amines or azides can be turned into phosphoramidites in two steps only. Individual attachment yields on nucleic acids and artificial oligophosphodiesters using automated solid-phase synthesis (SPS) were >90% in almost all cases. Using this method, multiple water-soluble sequence-defined oligomers bearing a range of functional groups in precise sequences could be synthesized and purified in high yields. The method described herein significantly expands the library of available functionalities for nucleic acids and sequence-controlled polymers.
ABSTRACT
A mild protocol has been developed for the Pd(II)-catalyzed alkoxycarbonylation of terminal olefins to produce α,ß-unsaturated esters with a wide range of substrates. Key features are the use of MeCN as solvent (and/or ligand) to control the reactivity of the intermediate Pd complexes and the combination of CO with O2, which facilitates the Cu(II)-mediated reoxidation of the Pd(0) complex to Pd(II) and prevents double carbonylation.
ABSTRACT
An efficient and practical Pd-catalyzed intramolecular oxidative allylic amidation provides facile access to derivatives of 1,3- and 1,4-amino alcohols and 1,3-diamines. The method operates under mild reaction conditions (RT) with molecular oxygen (1â atm) as the sole reoxidant of Pd. Excellent diastereoselectivities were attained with substrates bearing a secondary stereogenic center.
ABSTRACT
Enantiopure, Boc-protected alkoxyamines 12 and 13, derived from the readily available homoallylic alcohols 4 via a reaction that involves either inversion or retention of configuration, undergo a diastereoselective Pd-catalyzed ring-closing carbonylative amidation to produce isoxazolidines 16/17 (≤50:1 diastereoisomer ratio (d.r.)) that can be readily converted into the N-Boc-protected esters of ß-amino-δ-hydroxy acids and their γ-substituted homologues 37. The key carbonylative cyclization proceeds through an unusual syn addition of the palladium and the nitrogen nucleophile across the C=C bond (19â21), as revealed by the reaction of 15, which afforded isoxazolidine 18 with high diastereoselectivity.
ABSTRACT
α,ß-Unsaturated aldehydes 6a-j undergo an enantioselective allylation with allylic trichlorosilanes 2a,b in the presence of METHOX (4) as a Lewis basic catalyst (≤10 mol %) to produce the homoallylic alcohols 7a-l at good to high enantioselectivity (83-96% ee). This study shows that the reactivity scope of METHOX can be extended from aromatic to nonaromatic aldehydes.
ABSTRACT
Kinetic refinery: A practical, highly stereoselective, two-step catalytic protocol for the alpha-allylation of aldehydes, starting from crotyltrichlorosilanes, has been developed (see scheme). In each reaction step, one of the stereoisomers reacted faster than the other, which resulted in a kinetic stereochemical (E/Z) self-refinement of the system and led to the formation of virtually enantiomerically and geometrically pure linear homoallylic alcohols in high yield.
ABSTRACT
As colloidal self-assembly increasingly approaches the complexity of natural systems, an ongoing challenge is to generate non-centrosymmetric structures. For example, patchy, Janus or living crystallization particles have significantly advanced the area of polymer assembly. It has remained difficult, however, to devise polymer particles that associate in a directional manner, with controlled valency and recognition motifs. Here, we present a method to transfer DNA patterns from a DNA cage to a polymeric nanoparticle encapsulated inside the cage in three dimensions. The resulting DNA-imprinted particles (DIPs), which are 'moulded' on the inside of the DNA cage, consist of a monodisperse crosslinked polymer core with a predetermined pattern of different DNA strands covalently 'printed' on their exterior, and further assemble with programmability and directionality. The number, orientation and sequence of DNA strands grafted onto the polymeric core can be controlled during the process, and the strands are addressable independently of each other.
Subject(s)
DNA/chemistry , Molecular Imprinting , Nanoparticles/chemistry , Polymers/chemistry , Molecular Structure , Particle SizeABSTRACT
Directed alignment of polymer chains plays an indispensable role in charge transport properties. We focus not only on a specific method to induce the alignment but also on the design of a liquid crystalline (LC) conjugated polymer to take advantage of an intrinsic self-assembly characteristic. We synthesized a lyotropic LC conjugated polymer, CP1-P, having o-nitrobenzyl (ONB) esters as photocleavable side chains and adopted a floating film transfer method to induce the polymer chain alignment through a lyotropic LC phase transition. An optimum amount of a high boiling point solvent (1,2-dichlorobenzene) in chloroform turned out to be an important factor to maximize the polymer chain alignment. The hole transport mobility along the polymer chain alignment direction was 13-14 times higher than that in the direction perpendicular to the alignment. In addition, the removal of side chains resulted in the solvent resistivity while maintaining the alignment feature in organic thin-film transistors.
ABSTRACT
Correction for 'Antisense precision polymer micelles require less poly(ethylenimine) for efficient gene knockdown' by Johans J. Fakhoury, et al., Nanoscale, 2015, 7, 20625-20634.
ABSTRACT
Therapeutic nucleic acids are powerful molecules for shutting down protein expression. However, their cellular uptake is poor and requires transport vectors, such as cationic polymers. Of these, poly(ethylenimine) (PEI) has been shown to be an efficient vehicle for nucleic acid transport into cells. However, cytotoxicity has been a major hurdle in the development of PEI-DNA complexes as clinically viable therapeutics. We have synthesized antisense-polymer conjugates, where the polymeric block is completely monodisperse and sequence-controlled. Depending on the polymer sequence, these can self-assemble to produce micelles of very low polydispersity. The introduction of linear poly(ethylenimine) to these micelles leads to aggregation into size-defined PEI-mediated superstructures. Subsequently, both cellular uptake and gene silencing are greatly enhanced over extended periods compared to antisense alone, while at the same time cellular cytotoxicity remains very low. In contrast, gene silencing is not enhanced with antisense polymer conjugates that are not able to self-assemble into micelles. Thus, using antisense precision micelles, we are able to achieve significant transfection and knockdown with minimal cytotoxicity at much lower concentrations of linear PEI then previously reported. Consequently, a conceptual solution to the problem of antisense or siRNA delivery is to self-assemble these molecules into 'gene-like' micelles with high local charge and increased stability, thus reducing the amount of transfection agent needed for effective gene silencing.