Synthesis and Optical Properties of Excited-State Intramolecular Proton Transfer (ESIPT) Emitters with Sulfobetaine Fragments.


Journal

Organic & biomolecular chemistry
ISSN: 1477-0539
Titre abrégé: Org Biomol Chem
Pays: England
ID NLM: 101154995

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
08 06 2022
Historique:
pubmed: 26 5 2022
medline: 10 6 2022
entrez: 25 5 2022
Statut: epublish

Résumé

This article describes the synthetic efforts towards the solubilization of organic fluorescent emitters based on a 2-(2'-hydroxybenzofuranyl)benzazole (HBBX) scaffold in aqueous media under physiological conditions (PBS, pH 7.4). These dyes are well-known to display the excited-state intramolecular proton transfer (ESIPT) process which leads to a Stokes-shifted fluorescence with enhanced photostability and strong environment dependent features. Organic dyes are hydrophobic by nature and their vectorization into aqueous media usually necessitates amphiphilic polymers. In this study, we show that the incorporation of one or two sulfobetaine fragments, a highly biocompatible zwitterionic unit leads to the vectorization in buffer solution at pH 7.4 while keeping a reasonable ESIPT fluorescence emission. The photophysical properties of all dyes were studied in multiple solvents and showed that, depending on structure and environment, different excited-state species are observed: normal or tautomeric species, as well as a competitive anionic fluorescent derivative. This study shows that it is not only possible to solubilize fluorescent ESIPT dyes in water using sulfobetaine(s) but also that the optical properties can be finely tuned depending on small structural inputs.

Identifiants

pubmed: 35612088
doi: 10.1039/d2ob00691j
doi:

Substances chimiques

Fluorescent Dyes 0
Protons 0
Water 059QF0KO0R
Betaine 3SCV180C9W
sulfobetaine 8CVU22OCJW

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

4640-4649

Auteurs

Maxime Munch (M)

Institut de Chimie et Procédés pour l'Energie, l'Environnement et la Santé (ICPEES), Equipe Chimie Organique pour la Biologie, les Matériaux et l'Optique (COMBO), UMR CNRS 7515, Ecole Européenne de Chimie, Polymères et Matériaux (ECPM), Université de Strasbourg, 25 Rue Becquerel, 67087 Strasbourg Cedex 02, France. gulrich@unistra.fr.

Gilles Ulrich (G)

Institut de Chimie et Procédés pour l'Energie, l'Environnement et la Santé (ICPEES), Equipe Chimie Organique pour la Biologie, les Matériaux et l'Optique (COMBO), UMR CNRS 7515, Ecole Européenne de Chimie, Polymères et Matériaux (ECPM), Université de Strasbourg, 25 Rue Becquerel, 67087 Strasbourg Cedex 02, France. gulrich@unistra.fr.

Julien Massue (J)

Institut de Chimie et Procédés pour l'Energie, l'Environnement et la Santé (ICPEES), Equipe Chimie Organique pour la Biologie, les Matériaux et l'Optique (COMBO), UMR CNRS 7515, Ecole Européenne de Chimie, Polymères et Matériaux (ECPM), Université de Strasbourg, 25 Rue Becquerel, 67087 Strasbourg Cedex 02, France. gulrich@unistra.fr.

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Classifications MeSH