Anion binding by fluorescent Fmoc-protected amino acids |
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Authors: | David P. Farrell Andrew L. Sargent |
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Affiliation: | Department of Chemistry, Science and Technology Building, East Carolina University, Greenville, NC, 27858-4353 USA |
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Abstract: | Two non-natural amino acids with fluorescent urea side-chains were prepared from Fmoc-protected aspartic and glutamic acids. In acetonitrile solution, the emission of the Asp derivative is strongly quenched by HCO3? or H2PO4? (K ≥ 104 M? 1) but not by less-basic Cl? or NO3? . Solutions containing excess bicarbonate ion appear peach-colored, with λabs at 394 and 495 nm ascribed to the anion complex and urea-deprotonated sensor, respectively. Corresponding fluorescence bands are observed at 475 and 579 nm. Dihydrogenphosphate is not sufficiently basic to remove H+ from the ground state of the fluorophore. However, deprotonation of the excited state occurs in the presence of>1 equiv of H2PO4? (λem = 578 nm). According to 1H NMR in DMSO-d6, recognition of H2PO4? occurs at the urea N–H groups and the amino acid backbone N–H. DFT techniques further predict that the backbone C = O group accepts an H-bond from the anion. The Glu derivative has lower affinity for anions; the additional CH2 group in its side-chain apparently sets the backbone N–H and C = O too far from the urea to contribute significantly to binding. To demonstrate suitability for standard Fmoc-based solid-phase peptide synthesis, the Asp derivative was incorporated into a 12-residue peptide. |
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Keywords: | fluorescence anion binding solid-phase peptide synthesis membrane transport computational chemistry |
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