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1.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 63(22): e202403957, 2024 May 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38482736

ABSTRACT

Cyclic ß,ß-difluoro-carbonyl compounds have a venerable history as drug discovery leads, but limitations in the synthesis arsenal continue to impede chemical space exploration. This challenge is particularly acute in the arena of fluorinated medium rings where installing the difluoromethylene unit subtly alters the ring conformation by expanding the internal angle (∠C-CF2-C>∠C-CH2-C): this provides a handle to modulate physicochemistry (e.g. pKa). To reconcile this disparity, a highly modular ring expansion has been devised that leverages simple α,ß-unsaturated esters and amides, and processes them to one-carbon homologated rings with concomitant geminal difluorination (6 to 10 membered rings, up to 95 % yield). This process is a rare example of the formal difluorination of an internal alkene and is enabled by sequential I(III)-enabled O-activation. Validation of enantioselective catalysis in the generation of unprecedented medium ring scaffolds is reported (up to 93 : 7 e.r.) together with X-ray structural analyses and product derivatization.

2.
Anal Chim Acta ; 1242: 340796, 2023 Feb 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36657890

ABSTRACT

In this work, trapped ion mobility spectrometry (TIMS) was introduced to facilitate tandem mass spectrometry (MS2) experiments for laser desorption/ionization-mass spectrometry (LDI-MS) as mobility-resolved fragmentation. The mobility separation of desorbed ions was followed by subsequent fragmentation using data-independent broadband collision-induced dissociation (bbCID) or targeted fragmentation through a prototypic version of parallel reaction monitoring-parallel accumulation serial fragmentation (prm-PASEF) for LDI. Both mobility-resolved fragmentation options, TIMS-bbCID and prm-PASEF, were applied to LDI point measurements to identify organic pigments in tattoo inks. Furthermore, the prototypic prm-PASEF algorithm was used in imaging applications to increase confidence in annotating organic tattoo pigments in skin samples with adverse reactions. Due to less complex spectra in matrix-free LDI, both fragmentation methods yielded fast and reliable MS2 identification workflows. TIMS-bbCID was especially beneficial for the rapid acquisition of multiple fragment spectra. For the targeted prm-PASEF approach, analytes' mobilities needed to be collected prior to simplified fragmentation. Therefore, a reference list for 14 pigments was created. The possible number of experiments per thin section and the associated savings in analysis time compared to conventional MS2 were particularly suitable for the imaging application. Furthermore, the mobility dimension enabled a new orthogonal identification parameter, increasing the annotation confidence of tattoo pigments through compound specific mobilities.


Subject(s)
Tattooing , Ion Mobility Spectrometry/methods , Tandem Mass Spectrometry/methods
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