scholarly journals Donor-Acceptor Pyridinium Salts for Photo-Induced Electron Transfer Driven Modification of Tryptophan in Peptides, Proteins, and Proteomes using Visible Light

Author(s):  
Caleb Hoopes ◽  
Francisco Garcia ◽  
Akash Sarkar ◽  
Nicholas Kuehl ◽  
David Barkan ◽  
...  

Tryptophan (Trp) plays a variety of critical functional roles in protein biochemistry however, owing to its low natural frequency and poor nucleophilicity, the design of effective methods for both single protein bioconjugation at Trp as well as for in situ chemoproteomic profiling re-mains a challenge. Here, we report a method for covalent Trp modification that is suitable for both scenarios by invoking photo-induced electron transfer (PET) as a means of driving efficient reactivity. We have engineered biaryl N-carbamoyl pyridinium salts that possess a donor-acceptor relationship enabling optical triggering with visible light whilst simultaneously attenuating the probe’s photo-oxidation potential in order to prevent photodegradation. This probe was assayed against a small bank of eight peptides and proteins, where it was found that micromolar concentrations of probe and short irradiation times (10-60 min) with violet light enabled efficient reactivity towards surface exposed Trp residues. The carbamate transferring group can be used to transfer useful functional groups to proteins including affinity tags and click handles. DFT calculations and other mechanistic analyses reveal correlations between excited state lifetimes, relative fluorescent quantum yields, and chemical reactivity. Biotinylated and azide-functionalized pyridinium salts were used for Trp profiling in HEK293T lysates and in situ in HEK293T cells using 450 nm LED irradiation. Peptide level enrichment from live cell labelling experiments identified 290 Trp modifications, with an 82% selectivity for Trp modification over other π-amino acids; demonstrating the ability of this method to identify and quantify reactive Trp residues from live cells.

2017 ◽  
Vol 19 (21) ◽  
pp. 13596-13603 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Ahrens ◽  
M. Frank ◽  
G. H. Clever ◽  
D. Schwarzer

Photo-excitation of self-assembled palladium based coordination cages consisting of phenothiazine electron donor and anthraquinone electron acceptor ligands produce charge separated states with lifetimes of up to 1.5 ns.


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (42) ◽  
pp. 21968-21972
Author(s):  
Debabrata Samanta ◽  
Manish Kumar ◽  
Sugandha Singh ◽  
Parul Verma ◽  
Kamal K. Kar ◽  
...  

A donor–acceptor coordination polymer (TPA-Zn) was synthesized by Zn(ii)-assisted self-assembly of an in situ generated triphenylamine (TPA) cored tristerpyridine ligand.


Science ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 346 (6216) ◽  
pp. 1492-1495 ◽  
Author(s):  
Milan Delor ◽  
Paul A. Scattergood ◽  
Igor V. Sazanovich ◽  
Anthony W. Parker ◽  
Gregory M. Greetham ◽  
...  

Electron transfer (ET) from donor to acceptor is often mediated by nuclear-electronic (vibronic) interactions in molecular bridges. Using an ultrafast electronic-vibrational-vibrational pulse-sequence, we demonstrate how the outcome of light-induced ET can be radically altered by mode-specific infrared (IR) excitation of vibrations that are coupled to the ET pathway. Picosecond narrow-band IR excitation of high-frequency bridge vibrations in an electronically excited covalent trans-acetylide platinum(II) donor-bridge-acceptor system in solution alters both the dynamics and the yields of competing ET pathways, completely switching a charge separation pathway off. These results offer a step toward quantum control of chemical reactivity by IR excitation.


Author(s):  
Chenrui Liu ◽  
Lulu Liu ◽  
Yun Liu ◽  
Zhi Dang ◽  
Chengcheng Li

Herein, a kind of donor-acceptor conjugated microporous polymers (D-A CMPs), poly(triphenylamine-benzothiadiazole) denoted as TPABT, was introduced to synthesize a novel organic-inorganic heterojunction photocatalyst with TiO2 by in-situ polycondensation. The resultant...


2017 ◽  
Vol 41 (13) ◽  
pp. 5322-5333 ◽  
Author(s):  
Disha Soni ◽  
Suneel Gangada ◽  
Naresh Duvva ◽  
Tapta Kanchan Roy ◽  
Surendra Nimesh ◽  
...  

APTZ-BODIPY based fluorescent chemosensor was designed and used for hypochlorite detection.


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