Guofeng
Li‡
a,
Man
Zhao‡
a,
Junqiu
Xie‡
b,
Ying
Yao
a,
Lingyun
Mou
b,
Xiaowei
Zhang
b,
Xiaomin
Guo
b,
Wangsheng
Sun
b,
Zheng
Wang
c,
Jiecheng
Xu
a,
Jianzhong
Xue
a,
Tao
Hu
a,
Ming
Zhang
b,
Min
Li
*a and
Liang
Hong
*a
aGuangdong Key Laboratory of Chiral Molecular and Drug Discovery, School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Sun Yat-Sen University, Guangzhou 510006, China. E-mail: limin65@mail.sysu.edu.cn; hongliang@sysu.edu.cn
bKey Laboratory of Preclinical Study for New Drugs of Gansu Province, School of Basic Medical Sciences, Lanzhou University, Lanzhou 730000, China
cGuangdong Key Lab of Nano-Micro Material Research, School of Chemical Biology and Biotechnology, Peking University Shenzhen Graduate School, Shenzhen 518055, China
First published on 13th March 2020
Novel 10π-electron cyclic amidines with excellent fluorescence properties were synthesized by a general and efficient 6π-electrocyclic ring closure of ketenimine and imine starting from N-sulfonyl triazoles and arylamines. The photophysical properties of cyclic amidine fluorophores have been studied in detail and have shown good properties of a large Stokes shift, pH insensitivity, low cytotoxicity and higher photostability, which have great potential for biological imaging. Furthermore, this novel fluorophore was successfully applied to the localization of the NK-1 receptor in living systems.
To develop a new fluorescent framework, we wondered whether it is possible to incorporate an electron-donating and an electron-withdrawing group at the adjacent position of a π-system. Considering the particularity of this structure, we tried to choose π-system cyclic amidines as the core structure of novel fluorophores, not only due to their potent fluorescence properties,5 but also due to the electronic specificity of amidines (Fig. 1). However, how to incorporate an amidine into a π-system is a challenge, since the synthesis of such a scaffold is limited and difficult. Moreover, it usually needs a variety of cyclic amidines with structural diversity to study the fluorescence–structure relationship. Thus, it is necessary yet challenging to develop a simple and short synthetic route to access various cyclic amidines.
N-Sulfonyl-1,2,3-triazoles have become an important class of intermediates for accessing a wide variety of complex molecular scaffolds.6 Metal-bound imino carbenes, readily generated from N-sulfonyl 1,2,3-triazoles, have found wide application in many useful transformations, including cycloaddition, X–H insertion, alkyl migration, sigmatropic rearrangement and some other carbine induced reactions.6,7 In addition to imino carbenes, N-sulfonyl-1,2,3-triazoles could also form active ketenimine intermediates, which would readily undergo nucleophilic additions at C2.8 In particular, the ketenimines containing another electrophilic site would undergo double nucleophilic addition with amines to give cyclic amidines (Scheme 1a).9 Moreover, ketenimines could also in whole or in part participate in some cyclization reactions. For example, in the [1,5]-X sigmatropic shift/6π-electrocyclic ring closure (6π-ERC), the whole ketenimines (CC
NTs) take part in the reaction to give dihydroisoquinolines (Scheme 1b),8f,10 while part of the ketenimines (C
C) in the [2 + 2] cycloadditions reacts to give amidines (Scheme 1c).11 From these studies, we found that cyclic amidines could be constructed by the intramolecular conjunction of a nitrogen atom to the C2 of the ketenimine. Accordingly, we designed the intermediate A functionalized with an adjacent imine and ketenimine. The imine bond (C
NAr) was introduced for the formation of 6π-substrates suitable for ERC and might react with part of the ketenimines to give cyclic amidine products (Scheme 1d).
Entry | Cat. | Solvent | t (h) | Yieldb (%) |
---|---|---|---|---|
a Conditions: 1a (0.10 mmol, 1.0 equiv.), 2a (0.12 mmol, 1.2 equiv.), the catalyst (0.005 mmol, 5 mol%), and solvent (2.0 mL) in a sealed tube. b Isolated yield. | ||||
1 | CuI | CHCl3 | 2 | 17 |
2 | Cu(OAc)2 | CHCl3 | 2 | 26 |
3 | CuTC | CHCl3 | 2 | 46 |
4 | Rh2(OAc)4 | CHCl3 | 2 | 23 |
5 | Rh2(Oct)4 | CHCl3 | 2 | 54 |
6 | Pd(OAc)2 | CHCl3 | 2 | 54 |
7 | — | CHCl3 | 2 | 83 |
8 | — | CHCl 3 | 4 | 91 |
9 | — | CHCl3 | 10 | 86 |
10 | — | Toluene | 4 | 40 |
11 | — | DCE | 4 | 77 |
12 | — | THF | 4 | 30 |
13 | — | 1,4-Dioxane | 4 | 44 |
Under optimal conditions, the scopes of the reaction were examined as shown in Scheme 2. We first examined the scope of benzenamines with various substituents at different positions. The reaction proceeded efficiently to afford the corresponding cyclic amidines 3aa–3ar in good to excellent yields, though higher reactivity was observed with electron-donating groups. Significantly, the benzenamines with functional groups such as azide, hydroxy and carboxyl groups were well tolerated to give 3as–3au, which could be modified easily for the purpose of bioconjugate chemistry. Some other amines, including naphthyl amine, 2-aminopyridine and phenylhydrazine were also suitable substrates for the reaction, leading to the desired products 3av–3ax in moderate yields. The structure of 3aw was determined by X-ray crystallography.12 The scope of N-sulfonyl-1,2,3-triazoles was subsequently investigated. The reaction took place with moderate to excellent yields with substrates bearing different substituents 3ba–3be.
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Scheme 2 Scope of the reaction. Conditions: 1 (0.10 mmol, 1.0 equiv.), 2 (0.12 mmol, 1.2 equiv.) and the solvent (2.0 mL) in a sealed tube for 4 h at 120 °C. a1 mmol scale. |
To further understand the formation of cyclic amidine 3aa, analysis by DFT calculations was performed. As shown in Fig. 2, starting from ketenimine intermediate A, there are two pathways to proceed. By path a, the intermediate A could undergo 6π-electrocyclic ring closure (6π-ERC) via TSA–B to give B (3aa); while by path b, the intermediate A could undergo the first [1,5]-H shift to form the intermediate C, followed by the 6π-ERC via TSC–D to afford the isoquinolone D. The energy for the formation of TSA–B (ΔG = 7.2 kcal mol−1) is lower than that for the TSC–D (ΔG = 30.2 kcal mol−1). Therefore, the intermediate A favors path a to furnish the observed product 3aa.
With a series of 10π-electron cyclic amidines in hand, we measured their photophysical properties including absorptions, emissions, extinction coefficients, Stokes shifts and quantum yields. As shown in Table 2, the maximum absorption wavelengths (λmax) varied from 424 to 443 nm with moderate extinction coefficients (2110–4364 M−1 cm−1), while the maximum emission wavelengths (λem) varied from 525 to 552 nm with quantum yields from 1% to 23%. In addition, cyclic amidines 3as–3au with functional groups exhibited similar photophysical properties, which could be conveniently modified for further fluorophore tagging.
Compound | λ max (nm) | λ em (nm) | ε (M−1 cm−1) | Stokes shift (nm) | Φ (%) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
a Measured in CH3CN at 200 μM. b Molar extinction coefficient. c Absolute fluorescence quantum yield determined with an integrating sphere system. d The structures of coumarin and fluorescein are shown in Fig. 1. | |||||
Coumarin13d | 386 | 448 | 36![]() |
62 | 70 |
Fluorescein3bd | 490 | 512 | 93![]() |
22 | 95 |
3aa | 433 | 535 | 2110 | 102 | 17 |
3ab | 432 | 527 | 3066 | 95 | 23 |
3ac | 434 | 542 | 3613 | 108 | 14 |
3ad | 434 | 538 | 3790 | 104 | 13 |
3ae | 436 | 543 | 3588 | 107 | 11 |
3af | 437 | 545 | 3440 | 108 | 12 |
3ag | 434 | 538 | 3558 | 104 | 16 |
3ah | 434 | 541 | 3430 | 107 | 17 |
3ai | 434 | 535 | 3312 | 101 | 19 |
3aj | 435 | 536 | 2770 | 101 | 15 |
3ak | 435 | 540 | 3209 | 105 | 14 |
3al | 436 | 542 | 3786 | 106 | 14 |
3am | 435 | 543 | 3418 | 108 | 12 |
3an | 433 | 536 | 4364 | 103 | 19 |
3ao | 434 | 537 | 3874 | 103 | 18 |
3ap | 432 | 525 | 2804 | 93 | 22 |
3aq | 434 | 530 | 3917 | 96 | 18 |
3ar | 433 | 539 | 3578 | 106 | 14 |
3as | 435 | 535 | 2915 | 100 | 18 |
3at | 434 | 538 | 3250 | 104 | 18 |
3au | 434 | 536 | 2935 | 102 | 17 |
3av | 434 | 532 | 3170 | 98 | 18 |
3aw | 437 | 552 | 3099 | 115 | 1 |
3ax | 425 | 528 | 3865 | 103 | 16 |
3ba | 440 | 542 | 2285 | 102 | 09 |
3bb | 443 | 550 | 3771 | 107 | 09 |
3bc | 443 | 547 | 2796 | 104 | 10 |
3bd | 427 | 536 | 3853 | 109 | 17 |
3be | 424 | 535 | 2458 | 111 | 12 |
A good fluorophore for living systems has good properties including a remarkable Stokes shift, an applicable pH environment, high photostability and low biological toxicity. Keeping this in mind, we further examined these photophysical properties (Fig. 3). Based on the absorption and emission wavelengths in Table 2, all cyclic amidines exhibited remarkable Stokes shifts of ∼100 nm, which could minimize self-absorption and provide better fluorescence imaging. We next studied the effect of pH on cyclic amidine 3aa. The results showed that the pH value of the environment ranging from 2.8–11.4 had no effect on the emissive properties (Fig. 3c). In addition, amidine 3aa showed excellent resistance to photobleaching with only 3.4% fluorescence lost after one hour at the wavelength of maximum excitation (Fig. 3d).14 Subsequently, the impact of different solvent environments was investigated. As shown in Fig. 3e, 3aa worked well in aqueous environments, indicating that it could be used as a polarity probe. In addition, the emission intensity could be maintained in aqueous solution without loss after 24 h (see the ESI†). Moreover, cytotoxicity was another important factor for its application in living systems. We evaluated the cytotoxicity of 3aa by using CCK-8 assays for HeLa cells, and it exhibited no significant cytotoxicity at concentrations of up to 100 μM (Fig. 3f). These results demonstrated that the novel amidine fluorophore has good properties of a large Stokes shift, pH insensitivity, low cytotoxicity and good photostability, which has great potential for biological imaging.
Ligand-based probes15 have received extensive attention and have extensive applications due to their high selectivity and affinity in the visualization of receptor–ligand interactions and drug evaluation. In order to evaluate the potential of cyclic amidines for cell imaging, we synthesized a fluorescent probe 4 by conjugating cyclic amidine 3au with the hemokinin-1 (HK-1) peptide (TGKASQFFGLM-NH2), which was highly selective to the NK-1 receptor (Fig. 4a).16 The neurokinin-1 (NK-1) receptor, as a member of the G-protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) family, is located at the cell membrane. If a fluorescent ligand binds to the NK-1 receptor, it would give fluorescence signals at the cell membrane. To test whether fluorescent probe 4 could bind to the NK-1 receptor, WT 22RV1 and NK-1-overexpressing 22RV1 cells were treated with 4 respectively. As Fig. 4 shows, green fluorescence could only be observed in the cell membrane of NK-1-overexpressing 22RV1, not in the cell membrane of WT 22RV1. Furthermore, the fluorescence could be blocked with aprepitant, a selective NK-1 receptor antagonist, indicating that the fluorescent ligand 4 was specifically bound to the NK-1 receptor. These preliminary results demonstrated that amidine fluorophores could be used as potential bioprobes.
Footnotes |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: Details of the experimental procedure, structural characterization and spectral data of all new compounds and crystallographic data (CIF). CCDC 1942349. For ESI and crystallographic data in CIF or other electronic format see DOI: 10.1039/d0sc00798f |
‡ These authors contributed equally to this work. |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2020 |