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1.
J Org Chem ; 89(10): 6740-6748, 2024 May 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38695507

ABSTRACT

BODIPY photocages are photoreactive chromophores that release covalently linked cargo upon absorption of visible light. Here, we used computations of the T1 photoheterolysis barrier to ascertain whether a computational approach could assist in a priori structure design by identifying new structures with higher quantum yields of photorelease. The electronic structure-photoreactivity relationships were elucidated for boron-substituted and core-functionalized 2-substituted BODIPY photocages as well as aryl substitutions at the meso-methyl position. Although there is a clear trend for the 2-substituted derivatives, with donor-substituted derivatives featuring both lower computed barriers and higher experimental quantum yields, no trend in the quantum yield with the computed activation barrier is found for the meso-methyl-substituted or boron-substituted derivatives. The lack of a correlation between the experimental quantum yield with the computed barrier in the latter two substitution cases is attributed to the substituents having larger effects on the rates of competing channels (internal conversion and competitive photoreactions) than on the rate of the photoheterolysis channel. Thus, although in some cases computed photoreaction barriers can aid in identifying structures with higher quantum yields, the ignored impacts of how changing the structure affects the rates of competing photophysical/photochemical channels limit the effectiveness of this single-parameter approach.

2.
J Am Chem Soc ; 145(23): 12518-12531, 2023 06 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37265114

ABSTRACT

ß-Lapachone is an ortho-naphthoquinone natural product with significant antiproliferative activity but suffers from adverse systemic toxicity. The use of photoremovable protecting groups to covalently inactivate a substrate and then enable controllable release with light in a spatiotemporal manner is an attractive prodrug strategy to limit toxicity. However, visible light-activatable photocages are nearly exclusively enabled by linkages to nucleophilic functional sites such as alcohols, amines, thiols, phosphates, and sulfonates. Herein, we report covalent inactivation of the electrophilic quinone moiety of ß-lapachone via a C(sp3)-C(sp3) bond to a coumarin photocage. In contrast to ß-lapachone, the designed prodrug remained intact in human whole blood and did not induce methemoglobinemia in the dark. Under light activation, the C-C bond cleaves to release the active quinone, recovering its biological activity when evaluated against the enzyme NQO1 and human cancer cells. Investigations into this report of a C(sp3)-C(sp3) photoinduced bond cleavage suggest a nontraditional, radical-based mechanism of release beginning with an initial charge-transfer excited state. Additionally, caging and release of the isomeric para-quinone, α-lapachone, are demonstrated. As such, we describe a photocaging strategy for the pair of quinones and report a unique light-induced cleavage of a C-C bond. We envision that this photocage strategy can be extended to quinones beyond ß- and α-lapachone, thus expanding the chemical toolbox of photocaged compounds.


Subject(s)
Photochemistry , Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy , Photochemistry/methods , Humans , Models, Molecular , Cell Line, Tumor
3.
J Org Chem ; 87(21): 14334-14341, 2022 11 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36255274

ABSTRACT

BODIPY-based photocages release substrates by excitation with wavelengths in the visible to near-IR regions. The recent development of more efficient BODIPY photocages spurred us to evaluate the scope and efficiency of these second-generation boron-methylated green-light and red-light-absorbing BODIPY photocages. Here, we show that these more photosensitive photocages release amine, alcohol, phenol, phosphate, halides, and carboxylic acid derivatives with much higher quantum yields than first-generation BODIPY photocages and excellent chemical yields. Chemical yields are near-quantitative for the release of all functional groups except the photorelease of amines, which react with concomitantly photogenerated singlet oxygen. In these cases, high chemical yields for photoreleased amines are restored by irradiation under an inert atmosphere. The photorelease quantum yield has a weak relationship with the leaving group pKa of the green-absorbing BODIPY photocages but little relationship with the red-absorbing derivatives, suggesting that factors other than leaving group quality impact the quantum yield. For the photorelease of alcohols, in all cases a carbonate linker (that loses CO2 upon photorelease) significantly increases both the quantum yield and the chemical yield compared to those for direct photorelease via the ether.


Subject(s)
Boron Compounds , Light , Singlet Oxygen , Alcohols , Amines
4.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 58(75): 10556-10559, 2022 Sep 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36047322

ABSTRACT

Protective groups that can be selectively removed under mild conditions are an essential aspect of carbohydrate chemistry. Groups that can be selectively removed by visible light are particularly attractive because carbohydrates are transparent to visible light. Here, different BODIPY protecting groups were explored for their utility during glycan synthesis. A BODIPY group bearing a boron difluoride unit is stable during glycosylations but can be cleaved with green light as illustrated by the assembly of a trisaccharide.


Subject(s)
Boron Compounds , Carbohydrates , Glycosylation , Polysaccharides , Trisaccharides
5.
J Am Chem Soc ; 142(36): 15505-15512, 2020 09 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32786742

ABSTRACT

Photocages are light-sensitive chemical protecting groups that give investigators control over activation of biomolecules using targeted light irradiation. A compelling application of far-red/near-IR absorbing photocages is their potential for deep tissue activation of biomolecules and phototherapeutics. Toward this goal, we recently reported BODIPY photocages that absorb near-IR light. However, these photocages have reduced photorelease efficiencies compared to shorter-wavelength absorbing photocages, which has hindered their application. Because photochemistry is a zero-sum competition of rates, improvement of the quantum yield of a photoreaction can be achieved either by making the desired photoreaction more efficient or by hobbling competitive decay channels. This latter strategy of inhibiting unproductive decay channels was pursued to improve the release efficiency of long-wavelength absorbing BODIPY photocages by synthesizing structures that block access to unproductive singlet internal conversion conical intersections, which have recently been located for simple BODIPY structures from excited state dynamic simulations. This strategy led to the synthesis of new conformationally restrained boron-methylated BODIPY photocages that absorb light strongly around 700 nm. In the best case, a photocage was identified with an extinction coefficient of 124000 M-1 cm-1, a quantum yield of photorelease of 3.8%, and an overall quantum efficiency of 4650 M-1 cm-1 at 680 nm. This derivative has a quantum efficiency that is 50-fold higher than the best known BODIPY photocages absorbing >600 nm, validating the effectiveness of a strategy for designing efficient photoreactions by thwarting competitive excited state decay channels. Furthermore, 1,7-diaryl substitutions were found to improve the quantum yields of photorelease by excited state participation and blocking ion pair recombination by internal nucleophilic trapping. No cellular toxicity (trypan blue exclusion) was observed at 20 µM, and photoactivation was demonstrated in HeLa cells using red light.

6.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 55(34): 4973-4976, 2019 Apr 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30968098

ABSTRACT

We report for the first time a BODIPY-functionalized dichloro(1,10-phenanthroline)palladium(ii) complex as an efficient photoredox catalyst for the Sonogashira C-C cross-coupling between phenylacetylene derivatives and iodobenzene derivatives with yields up to 92% under visible light illumination at room temperature.

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