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1.
J Am Chem Soc ; 146(30): 20627-20635, 2024 Jul 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39023430

ABSTRACT

Photoactivatable or "caged" pharmacological agents combine the high spatiotemporal specificity of light application with the molecular specificity of drugs. A key factor in all optopharmacology experiments is the mechanism of uncaging, which dictates the photochemical quantum yield and determines the byproducts produced by the light-driven chemical reaction. In previous work, we demonstrated that coumarin-based photolabile groups could be used to cage tertiary amine drugs as quaternary ammonium salts. Although stable, water-soluble, and useful for experiments in brain tissue, these first-generation compounds exhibit relatively low uncaging quantum yield (Φu < 1%) and release the toxic byproduct formaldehyde upon photolysis. Here, we elucidate the photochemical mechanisms of coumarin-caged tertiary amines and then optimize the major pathway using chemical modification. We discovered that the combination of 3,3-dicarboxyazetidine and bromine substituents shift the mechanism of release to heterolysis, eliminating the formaldehyde byproduct and giving photolabile tertiary amine drugs with Φu > 20%─a 35-fold increase in uncaging efficiency. This new "ABC" cage allows synthesis of improved photoactivatable derivatives of escitalopram and nicotine along with a novel caged agonist of the oxytocin receptor.


Subject(s)
Amines , Coumarins , Photochemical Processes , Coumarins/chemistry , Amines/chemistry , Molecular Structure , Photolysis
2.
Adv Sci (Weinh) ; 11(12): e2306893, 2024 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38225898

ABSTRACT

H2 generation from methanol-water mixtures often requires high pressure and high temperature (200-300 °C). However, CO can be easily generated and poison the catalytic system under such high temperature. Therefore, it is highly desirable to develop the efficient catalytic systems for H2 production from methanol at room temperature, even at sub-zero temperatures. Herein, carbon nanotube-supported Pt nanocomposites are designed and synthesized as high-performance nano-catalysts, via stabilization of Pt nanoparticles onto carbon nanotube (CNT), for H2 production upon methanol dehydrogenation at sub-zero temperatures. Therein, the optimal Pt/CNT nanocomposite presents the superior catalytic performance in H2 production upon methanol dehydrogenation at the expense of B2(OH)4, with the TOF of 299.51 min-130 oC. Compared with other common carriers, Pt/CNT exhibited the highest catalytic performance in H2 production, emphasizing the critical role of CNT in methanol dehydrogenation. The confinement of Pt nanoparticles by CNTs is conducive to inhibiting the aggregation of Pt nanoparticles, thereby significantly increasing its catalytic performance and stability. The kinetic study, detailed mechanistic insights, and density functional theory (DFT) calculation confirm that the breaking of O─H bond of CH3OH is the rate-controlling step for methanol dehydrogenation, and both H atoms of H2 are supplied by methanol. Interestingly, H2 is also successfully produced from methanol dehydrogenation at -10 °C, which absolutely solves the freezing problem in the H2 evolution upon water-splitting reaction.

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