Bergman cyclization of main-chain enediyne polymers for enhanced DNA cleavage†
Abstract
Since the discovery of the role of enediynes in natural antibiotics (such as calicheamicines) via in situ diradical-induced DNA strand cleavage, Bergman cyclization has attracted fervent attention for decades. Thus, Bergman cyclization is widely used in pharmaceutics, synthesis, and polymer chemistry as a trigger for the generation of diradicals. Whereas applications of the Bergman cyclization in polymers mostly rely on side-chain linked enediynes, strategies to embed enediynes as the main repeating units into polymers are not reported yet. Here, the synthesis of main-chain enediyne polymers was accomplished, allowing to embed and control the reactivity of the diamino enediynes via polycondensation into polyimines. Such main-chain enediyne polymers in solution exert a chain-length dependent DNA cleavage activity under physiological conditions, additionally tunable by modulating the stereoelectronic environment via their substitution patterns. Photochemical activation generates long-lived free radicals as verified via electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy, with rates of their formation comparable to those in DNA cleavage experiments.