Novel pyrene-calix4arene derivatives as highly sensitive sensors for nucleotides, DNA and RNA

Covalent functionalization of a calix[4]arene with one or two pyrene arms at one rim and two imidazoles at the opposite rim of the macrocyclic basket, yields fluorescent conjugates characterized by intramolecular pyrene-calixarene exciplex emission of a mono-pyrene conjugate, whereas the bis-pyrene...

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Veröffentlicht in:RSC advances 2023-09, Vol.13 (39), p.27423
Hauptverfasser: Nikšić-Franjić, Ivana, Colasson, Benoit, Reinaud, Olivia, Višnjevac, Aleksandar, Piantanida, Ivo, Pavlović Saftić, Dijana
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Covalent functionalization of a calix[4]arene with one or two pyrene arms at one rim and two imidazoles at the opposite rim of the macrocyclic basket, yields fluorescent conjugates characterized by intramolecular pyrene-calixarene exciplex emission of a mono-pyrene conjugate, whereas the bis-pyrene derivative exhibits pyrene excimer fluorescence. The pyrene emission in these novel compounds is shown to be sensitive to non-covalent interactions with both mono- and polynucleotides. Pyrene-calixarene conjugates, acting as host molecules, strongly interact with nucleotides, as monitored by moderate emission quenching, reaching 0.1 μM affinities, comparable to some of the most effective supramolecular sensors for nucleotides. These compounds are efficiently inserted into ds-DNA/RNA grooves, with a high, 0.1-1 μM affinity, not influencing significantly any of the ds-polynucleotide native properties, whereby complete emission quenching allows the detection of DNA at nM concentration.Covalent functionalization of a calix[4]arene with one or two pyrene arms at one rim and two imidazoles at the opposite rim of the macrocyclic basket, yields fluorescent conjugates characterized by intramolecular pyrene-calixarene exciplex emission of a mono-pyrene conjugate, whereas the bis-pyrene derivative exhibits pyrene excimer fluorescence. The pyrene emission in these novel compounds is shown to be sensitive to non-covalent interactions with both mono- and polynucleotides. Pyrene-calixarene conjugates, acting as host molecules, strongly interact with nucleotides, as monitored by moderate emission quenching, reaching 0.1 μM affinities, comparable to some of the most effective supramolecular sensors for nucleotides. These compounds are efficiently inserted into ds-DNA/RNA grooves, with a high, 0.1-1 μM affinity, not influencing significantly any of the ds-polynucleotide native properties, whereby complete emission quenching allows the detection of DNA at nM concentration.
ISSN:2046-2069
2046-2069
DOI:10.1039/d3ra05696a