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1.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; : e202406915, 2024 Jun 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38856007

ABSTRACT

S(VI) compounds with multiple N or O substituents are  often difficult to make and several crucial routes, such as multimodal SuFEx (Sulfur (VI) Fluoride Exchange) chemistry, rely on the highly useful but hazardous SOF4 gas. Safety issues and inaccessibility of SOF4 strongly hamper the developments of these organic compounds. Here we describe the synthesis and applications of 2-methylimidazole-1-(N-tert-octyl)sulfonimidoyl fluoride (ImSF), a novel bench-stable analogue of SOF4. ImSF is synthesized on a gram scale via a double fluorination of t-OctNSO. We show ImSF can undergo substitution reactions with phenols and amines, which lead to sulfurimidates and sulfuramidimidates, respectively, the intrinsically chiral analogous of medicinally relevant sulfates and sulfamates in which an S=O moiety is replaced by S=NR unit. Finally we demonstrate that such substitutions can occur enantiospecifically, providing the first entry to chiral sulfurimidates and sulfuramidimidates.

2.
Anal Chem ; 2024 Jun 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38862388

ABSTRACT

The diversity of cannabinoid isomers and complexity of Cannabis products pose significant challenges for analytical methodologies. In this study, we developed a method to analyze 14 different cannabinoid isomers in diverse samples within milliseconds by leveraging the unique adduct-forming behavior of silver ions in advanced cyclic ion mobility spectrometry-mass spectrometry. The developed method achieved the separation of isomers from four groups of cannabinoids: Δ3-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) (1), Δ8-THC (2), Δ9-THC (3), cannabidiol (CBD) (4), Δ8-iso-THC (5), and Δ(4)8-iso-THC (6) (all MW = 314); 9α-hydroxyhexahydrocannabinol (7), 9ß-hydroxyhexahydrocannabinol (8), and 8-hydroxy-iso-THC (9) (all MW = 332); tetrahydrocannabinolic acid (THCA) (10) and cannabidiolic acid (CBDA) (11) (both MW = 358); Δ8-tetrahydrocannabivarin (THCV) (12), Δ8-iso-THCV (13), and Δ9-THCV (14) (all MW = 286). Moreover, experimental and theoretical traveling wave collision cross section values in nitrogen (TWCCSN2) of cannabinoid-Ag(I) species were obtained for the first time with an average error between experimental and theoretical values of 2.6%. Furthermore, a workflow for the identification of cannabinoid isomers in Cannabis and Cannabis-derived samples was established based on three identification steps (m/z and isotope pattern of Ag(I) adducts, TWCCSN2, and MS/MS fragments). Afterward, calibration curves of three major cannabinoids were established with a linear range of 1-250 ng·ml-1 for Δ8-THC (2) (R2 = 0.9999), 0.1-25 ng·ml-1 for Δ9-THC (3) (R2 = 0.9987), and 0.04-10 ng·ml-1 for CBD (4) (R2 = 0.9986) as well as very low limits of detection (0.008-0.2 ng·ml-1). Finally, relative quantification of Δ8-THC (2), Δ9-THC (3), and CBD (4) in eight complex acid-treated CBD mixtures was achieved without chromatographic separation. The results showed good correspondence (R2 = 0.999) with those obtained by gas chromatography-flame ionization detection/mass spectrometry.

3.
Adv Sci (Weinh) ; : e2401807, 2024 May 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38790132

ABSTRACT

The interaction of perfluorinated molecules, also known as "forever chemicals" due to their pervasiveness, with their environment remains an important yet poorly understood topic. In this work, the self-assembly of perfluorinated molecules with multivalent hosts, pillar-[5]-arenes, is investigated. It is found that perfluoroalkyl diacids and pillar-[5]-arenes rapidly and strongly complex with each other at aqueous interfaces, forming solid interfacially templated films. Their complexation is shown to be driven primarily by fluorophilic aggregation and assisted by electrostatic interactions, as supported by the crystal structure of the complexes, and leads to the formation of quasi-2D phase-separated films. This self-assembly process can be further manipulated using aqueous two-phase system microdroplets, enabling the controlled formation of 3D micro-scaffolds.

4.
Chembiochem ; : e202400037, 2024 Apr 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38688858

ABSTRACT

Our gut microbiota directly influences human physiology in health and disease. The myriad of surface glycoconjugates in both the bacterial cell envelope and our gut cells dominate the microbiota-host interface and play a critical role in host response and microbiota homeostasis. Among these, peptidoglycan is the basic glycan polymer offering the cell rigidity and a basis on which many other glycoconjugates are anchored. To directly study peptidoglycan in gut commensals and obtain the molecular insight required to understand their functional activities we need effective techniques like chemical probes to label peptidoglycan in live bacteria. Here we report a chemically guided approach to study peptidoglycan in a key mucin-degrading gut microbiota member of the Verrucomicrobia phylum, Akkermansia muciniphila. Two novel non-toxic tetrazine click-compatible peptidoglycan probes with either a cyclopropene or isonitrile handle allowed for the detection and imaging of peptidoglycan synthesis in this intestinal species.

5.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 63(20): e202403474, 2024 May 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38506404

ABSTRACT

Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) pose a rapidly increasing global problem as their widespread use and high stability lead worldwide to water contamination, with significant detrimental health effects.[1] Supramolecular chemistry has been invoked to develop materials geared towards the specific capture of PFAS from water,[2] to reduce the concentration below advisory safety limits (e.g., 70 ng/L for the sum of perfluorooctane sulfonic acid, PFOS and perfluorooctanoic acid, PFOA). Scale-up and use in natural waters with high PFAS concentrations has hitherto posed a problem. Here we report a new type of host-guest interaction between deca-ammonium-functionalized pillar[5]arenes (DAF-P5s) and perfluoroalkyl acids. DAF-P5 complexes show an unprecedented 1 : 10 stoichiometry, as confirmed by isothermal calorimetry and X-ray crystallographic studies, and high binding constants (up to 106 M-1) to various polyfluoroalkyl acids. In addition, non-fluorinated acids do not hamper this process significantly. Immobilization of DAF-P5s allows a simple single-time filtration of PFAS-contaminated water to reduce the PFOS/PFOA concentration 106 times to 15-50 ng/L level. The effective and fast (<5 min) orthogonal binding to organic molecules without involvement of fluorinated supramolecular hosts, high breakthrough capacity (90 mg/g), and robust performance (>10 regeneration cycles without decrease in performance) set a new benchmark in PFAS-absorbing materials.

6.
Langmuir ; 2024 Feb 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38330268

ABSTRACT

Cell adhesion involves many interactions between various molecules on the cell membrane (receptors, coreceptors, integrins, etc.) and surfaces or other cells. Cell adhesion plays a crucial role in the analysis of immune response, cancer treatment, tissue engineering, etc. Cell-cell adhesion can be quantified by measuring cell avidity, which defines the total interaction strength of the live cell binding. Typically, those investigations use tailor-made, reusable chips or surfaces onto which cells are cultured to form a monolayer to which other cells can bind. Cell avidity can then be measured by applying a force and quantifying cell-cell bond ruptures. The subsequent cleaning and reactivation of such biochip and biointeractive surfaces often require repeated etching, leading to device damage. Furthermore, it is often of great interest to harvest the cells that remain bound at the end of an avidity experiment for further analysis or use. It is, therefore, advantageous to pursue coating methods that allow tunable cell adhesion. This work presents temperature-switchable poly(di(ethylene glycol) methyl ether methacrylate) brush-based cell-interactive coatings produced by surface-initiated photoinduced electron-transfer reversible addition-fragmentation chain-transfer polymerization. The temperature switch of these brushes was explored by using a quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation monitoring, chemical composition, and physicochemical properties by atom force microscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, single-molecule force spectroscopy, and ellipsometry.

7.
Food Chem ; 440: 138187, 2024 May 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38134831

ABSTRACT

Δ8-Tetrahydrocannabinol (Δ8-THC) is increasingly popular as a controversial substitute for Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol (Δ9-THC) in cannabinoid-infused edibles. Δ8-THC is prepared from cannabidiol (CBD) by treatment with acids. Side products including Δ9-THC and other isomers that might end up in Δ8-THC edibles are less studied. In this paper, three orthogonal methods, namely reversed-phase (RP)-UHPLC-DAD/HRMS, normal-phase/argentation (silica-Ag(I))-HPLC-DAD/MS, and GC-FID/MS were developed for analysis of cannabinoid isomers, namely Δ8-THC, Δ9-THC, CBD, Δ8-iso-THC, Δ(4)8-iso-THC, and hydrated THC isomers. Eight acid-treated CBD mixtures contained various amounts of Δ8-THC (0-89%, w/w%), high levels of Δ9-THC (up to 49%), Δ8-isoTHC (up to 55%), Δ(4)8-iso-THC (up to 17%), and three hydrated THC isomers. Commercial Δ8-THC gummies were also analyzed, and issues like overclaimed Δ8-THC, excessive Δ9-THC, undeclared Δ8-iso-THC, and Δ(4)8-iso-THC were found. These findings highlight the urgency of improving regulations towards converting CBD to Δ8-THC for use as food ingredients.


Subject(s)
Cannabidiol , Cannabinoids , Cannabis , Cannabinoids/analysis , Dronabinol/analysis , Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry , Liquid Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry
8.
ACS Catal ; 13(20): 13446-13455, 2023 Oct 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37881787

ABSTRACT

Viable alternatives to scarce and expensive noble-metal-based catalysts are transition-metal carbides such as Mo and W carbides. It has been shown that these are active and selective catalysts in the hydrodeoxygenation of renewable lipid-based feedstocks. However, the reaction mechanism and the structure-activity relationship of these transition-metal carbides have not yet been fully clarified. In this work, the reaction mechanism of butyric acid hydrodeoxygenation (HDO) over molybdenum carbide (Mo2C) has been studied comprehensively by means of density functional theory coupled with microkinetic modeling. We identified the rate-determining step to be butanol dissociation: C4H9*OH + * → C4H9* + *OH. Then we further explored the possibility to facilitate this step upon heteroatom doping and found that Zr- and Nb-doped Mo2C are the most promising catalysts with enhanced HDO catalytic activity. Linear-scaling relationships were established between the electronic and geometrical descriptors of the dopants and the catalytic performance of various doped Mo2C catalysts. It was demonstrated that descriptors such as dopants' d-band filling and atomic radius play key roles in governing the catalytic activity. This fundamental understanding delivers practical strategies for the rational design of Mo2C-based transition-metal carbide catalysts with improved HDO performance.

9.
J Org Chem ; 88(22): 15658-15665, 2023 Nov 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37903243

ABSTRACT

Here we report the first asymmetric synthesis of large chiral macrocycles with chiral sulfur atoms. Building on stereospecific SuFEx and SuPhenEx click chemistries, this approach utilizes disulfonimidoyl fluorides and disulfonimidoyl p-nitrophenolates─which are efficient building blocks with two chiral sulfur centers, and diphenols to efficiently form novel S-O bonds. Characteristic results include the enantiospecific one-step synthesis of rings consisting of 21-58 members and characterization of both enantiomers (R,R and S,S) by e.g. X-ray crystallography.

10.
Molecules ; 28(20)2023 Oct 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37894487

ABSTRACT

We developed an improved, robust synthesis of a series of pillar[6]arenes with a varying number (0-3) of quinone moieties in the ring. This easy-to-control variation yielded a gradually less electron-rich cavity in going from zero to three quinone units, as shown from the strength of host-guest interactions with silver ions. Such macrocycle-Ag2 complexes themselves were shown to display an unprecedented, sharp distinction between terminal alkynes, which strongly bound to such complexes, and internal alkynes, internal alkenes and terminal alkenes, which do hardly bind.

11.
Anal Chim Acta ; 1278: 341673, 2023 Oct 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37709425

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Phospholipids (PLs) are major constituents of cell membranes, play important roles in cell proliferation and death, as well as in signal transduction, and therefore are relevant biomarkers for different pathologies. On the other hand, when the analysis of small compounds, such as therapeutics in blood is desired, then phospholipids are part of the matrix and cause serious interference during analysis. Currently, both the analysis and removal of PLs from biological samples are limited by extensive sample preparation and instrumental separation. RESULTS: A fast and simple quantitative Ti4+-modified paper spray tandem mass spectrometric (TiPS-MS/MS) method was established in urine, where the enrichment of phospholipids was achieved, as well as reduction of matrix effects (primarily caused by high salt content) that ultimately led to improved sensitivity and selectivity. The method could achieve a physiologically relevant limit of detection (0.01-0.03 µg mL-1). Also, the usefulness of the Ti4+-modified paper was investigated in the opposite mode, namely for the selective removal of phospholipids from matrices such as plasma. Clonidine is used as model compound, as the detection of this compound is known to suffer from ion suppression by phospholipids. Compared with blank paper spray tandem mass spectrometry, the limit of detection could be improved from 0.3 µg mL-1 to 0.03 µg mL-1 by employing a Ti4+-modified paper on top of the spray tip to capture phospholipids from the sample. SIGNIFICANCE AND NOVELTY: A novel Ti4+-modified paper was developed to allow for rapid solid-phase extraction of phospholipids from urine or selective removal from plasma, followed by direct paper spray mass spectrometric detection as a fast and convenient sample preparation and analysis combination. The paper properties are based on the Ti4+ metal ion, which can selectively bind phosphate-containing compounds under acidic conditions, and its applicability was demonstrated in relevant biological matrices.


Subject(s)
Body Fluids , Tandem Mass Spectrometry , Titanium , Plasma , Phospholipids
12.
J Sep Sci ; 46(20): e2300426, 2023 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37582650

ABSTRACT

As acetonitrile is a widely used solvent for the chemical industry, the recovery of acetonitrile from acetonitrile wastewater is significant for both industrial cost reduction and environmental protection. In this article, a simple, low-energy, and low-cost strategy is proposed for the effective separation of acetonitrile from high-concentration acetonitrile wastewater. The approach is based on a sequential combination of two steps: salt-induced phase separation and hydrophobic filtration. The acetonitrile wastewater was first induced to split into two phases by salt, that is, the acetonitrile-rich phase and the water-rich phase, then the above two phases were poured into the hydrophobic filter paper funnel for the separation. It was shown that NaCl is a suitable salting-out reagent, and that hydrophobic filter papers-obtained from modification by butyltrichlorosilane and octyltrichlorosilane were the optimal choice for hydrophobic filtration. The salt-induced phase separation process is able to increase the volume fraction of acetonitrile in the acetonitrile-rich phase up to 92%. The acetonitrile-rich phase can pass through the hydrophobic filter paper, whereas the water-rich phase was intercepted. The hydrophobic filter paper retained strong hydrophobicity and high acetonitrile-separating capacity after 3 months storage, or upon immersion in acetonitrile-water mixtures for 12 h, or applied for 25 consecutive separations.

13.
Chemistry ; 29(61): e202301795, 2023 Nov 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37560922

ABSTRACT

The imine bond is among the most applied motifs in dynamic covalent chemistry. Although its uses are varied and often involve coordination to a transition metal for stability, mechanistic studies on imine exchange reactions so far have not included metal coordination. Herein, we investigated the condensation and transimination reactions of an Fe2+ -coordinated diimine pyridine pincer, employing wB97XD/6-311G(2d,2p) DFT calculations in acetonitrile. We first experimentally confirmed that Fe2+ is strongly coordinated by these pincers, and is thus a justified model ion. When considering a four-membered ring-shaped transition state for proton transfers, the required activation energies for condensation and transimination reaction exceeded the values expected for reactions known to be spontaneous at room temperature. The nature of the incoming and exiting amines and the substituents on the para-position of the pincer had no effect on this. Replacing Fe2+ with Zn2+ or removing it altogether did not reduce it either. However, the addition of two ethylamine molecules lowered the energy barriers to be compatible with experiment (19.4 and 23.2 kcal/mol for condensation and transimination, respectively). Lastly, the energy barrier of condensation of a non-coordinated pincer was significantly higher than found for Fe2+ -coordinating pincers, underlining the catalyzing effect of metal coordination on imine exchange reactions.

14.
Polym Chem ; 14(29): 3357-3363, 2023 Jul 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37497044

ABSTRACT

Surface-initiated photoinduced electron transfer-reversible addition-fragmentation chain transfer (SI-PET-RAFT) provides a light-dependent tool to synthesize polymer brushes on different surfaces that tolerates oxygen and water, and does not require a metal catalyst. Here we introduce improved control over SI-PET-RAFT polymerizations via continuous flow conditions. We confirm the composition and topological structure of the brushes by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, ellipsometry, and AFM. The improved control compared to no-flow conditions provides prolonged linear growth of the polymer brush (up to 250 nm, where no-flow polymerization maxed out <50 nm), and improved polymerization control of the polymer brush that allows the construction of diblock polymer brushes. We further show the linear correlation between the molecular weight of the polymer brush and its dry thickness by combining ellipsometry and single-molecule force spectroscopy.

15.
Org Lett ; 25(30): 5666-5670, 2023 Aug 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37490052

ABSTRACT

Reaction of sulfonimidoyl fluorides with anilines and Ca(NTf2)2 results in the formation of chiral sulfonimidamides. The reaction proceeds with inversion of the stereocenter at a sulfur atom. Enantiospecificity of the reaction was observed for all studied non-heterocyclic anilines. Combined experimental and computational mechanistic studies highlight chelate-type coordination of the sulfonimidoyl group to Ca(NTf2)2 and the formation of a SN2-like transition state, in which leaving F- coordinates with the Ca2+ ion.

16.
Langmuir ; 39(27): 9290-9299, 2023 07 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37366321

ABSTRACT

We analyze modularity for a B-M-E triblock protein designed to self-assemble into antifouling coatings. Previously, we have shown that the design performs well on silica surfaces when B is taken to be a silica-binding peptide, M is a thermostable trimer domain, and E is the uncharged elastin-like polypeptide (ELP), E = (GSGVP)40. Here, we demonstrate that we can modulate the nature of the substrate on which the coatings form by choosing different solid-binding peptides as binding domain B and that we can modulate antifouling properties by choosing a different hydrophilic block E. Specifically, to arrive at antifouling coatings for gold surfaces, as binding block B we use the gold-binding peptide GBP1 (with the sequence MHGKTQATSGTIQS), while we replace the antifouling blocks E by zwitterionic ELPs of different lengths, EZn = (GDGVP-GKGVP)n/2, with n = 20, 40, or 80. We find that even the B-M-E proteins with the shortest E blocks make coatings on gold surfaces with excellent antifouling against 1% human serum (HS) and reasonable antifouling against 10% HS. This suggests that the B-M-E triblock protein can be easily adapted to form antifouling coatings on any substrate for which solid-binding peptide sequences are available.


Subject(s)
Biofouling , Humans , Biofouling/prevention & control , Peptides/chemistry , Amino Acid Sequence , Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions , Silicon Dioxide
18.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 14(19): 4454-4461, 2023 May 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37151054

ABSTRACT

Silicon solar cells are operating close to the theoretical maximum efficiency limit. To increase their efficiency beyond this limit, it is necessary to decrease energy losses occurring for high-energy photons. A sensitizing layer of singlet-fission material can in principle double the current generated by high-energy photons, and significantly reduce energy losses from high-energy photons within the solar cell. Here, we construct a model of such a solar cell, using Si(111) surfaces and tetracene. To increase the energy transfer between the two layers, a series of tetracene derivatives was synthesized, and the molecules were covalently attached onto the silicon surface as a seed layer. Using X-ray diffraction, a shift in crystal structure and ordering of the tetracene close to the seed layer can be observed. Unfortunately, the effect on the energy transfer was limited, showing a need for further investigations into the effect of the seed layer.

19.
Langmuir ; 39(22): 7613-7622, 2023 Jun 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37216307

ABSTRACT

The ability to tailor polymer brush coatings to the last nanometer has arguably placed them among the most powerful surface modification techniques currently available. Generally, the synthesis procedures for polymer brushes are designed for a specific surface type and monomer functionality and cannot be easily employed otherwise. Herein, we describe a modular and straightforward two-step grafting-to approach that allows introduction of polymer brushes of a desired functionality onto a large range of chemically different substrates. To illustrate the modularity of the procedure, gold, silicon oxide (SiO2), and polyester-coated glass substrates were modified with five different block copolymers. In short, the substrates were first modified with a universally applicable poly(dopamine) primer layer. Subsequently, a grafting-to reaction was performed on the poly(dopamine) films using five distinct block copolymers, all of which contained a short poly(glycidyl methacrylate) segment and longer segment of varying chemical functionality. Ellipsometry, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and static water contact angle measurements confirmed successful grafting of all five block copolymers to the poly(dopamine)-modified gold, SiO2, and polyester-coated glass substrates. In addition, our method was used to provide direct access to binary brush coatings, by simultaneous grafting of two different polymer materials. The ability to synthesize binary brush coatings further adds to the versatility of our approach and paves the way toward production of novel multifunctional and responsive polymer coatings.

20.
Chemistry ; 29(39): e202300231, 2023 Jul 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36942680

ABSTRACT

Reaction rates of strained cycloalkynes and cycloalkenes with 1,2-quinone were quantified by stopped flow UV-Vis spectroscopy and computational analysis. We found that the strained alkyne BCN-OH 3 (k2 1824 M-1 s-1 ) reacts >150 times faster than the strained alkene TCO-OH 5 (k2 11.56 M-1 s-1 ), and that derivatization with a carbamate can lead to a reduction of the rate constant with almost half. Also, the 8-membered strained alkyne BCN-OH 3 reacts 16 times faster than the more strained 7-membered THS 2 (k2 110.6 M-1 s-1 ). Using the linearized Eyring equation we determined the thermodynamic activation parameters of these two strained alkynes, revealing that the SPOCQ reaction of quinone 1 with THS 2 is associated with ΔH≠ of 0.80 kcal/mol, ΔS≠ =-46.8 cal/K⋅mol, and ΔG≠ =14.8 kcal/mol (at 25 °C), whereas the same reaction with BCN-OH 3 is associated with, ΔH≠ =2.25 kcal/mol, ΔS≠ =-36.3 cal/K⋅mol, and ΔG≠ =13.1 kcal/mol (at 25 °C). Computational analysis supported the values obtained by the stopped-flow measurements, with calculated ΔG≠ of 15.6 kcal/mol (in H2 O) for the SPOCQ reaction with THS 2, and with ΔG≠ of 14.7 kcal/mol (in H2 O) for the SPOCQ reaction with BCN-OH 3. With these empirically determined thermodynamic parameters, we set an important step towards a more fundamental understanding of this set of rapid click reactions.

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