Application of flow-through sold-phase-synthesis to the fluorescent labeling of amines with carboxylic and funtionalized bodipy dyes
Abstract
The use of fluorophores for the labelling of biomolecules in living cells has
become a key method for understanding processes in cellular biology. Synthetic
fluorescent molecules can be introduced non-specifically to uniformly stain cells
or selectively label a protein of interest to visualize cellular activity and
metabolism using fluorescent microscopy. An increasingly popular small
molecule fluorophore at the forefront of fluorescent cellular observation is the
group known as the 4,4-difluoro-4-bora-3a,4a-diaza-s-indacene (BODIPY) dyes.
This particular family of fluorophores are known to be strongly UV-absorbing and
emit sharp fluorescent peaks with high quantum yields. Characteristics that
make BODIPY dyes even more desirable for biological imaging are their
insensitivity to the polarity and pH of their environment allowing them to stay
reasonably stable at physiological conditions. Structural modifications to the
BODIPY core allow for the fine tuning of its photochemical properties and allow
a certain level of fluorescence control – however these changes can result in
long, often low-yielding syntheses. As part of this research, a solid-phase-
synthesis (SPS) method was developed as a flow through system to efficiently
attach a variety of BODIPY fluorophores to amine-functionalized compounds. In
order for this reaction to occur, the fluorophore requires a carboxylic acid moiety
available to attach to the resin and subsequently couple to an amine through
amide bond linkage. The synthesis of these BODIPY derivatives will also be
described.
This work demonstrates an efficient method for coupling different BODIPY dyes
to a variety of amines as well as the preparation of an AMPS-DCT resin used for
amide coupling using SPS. The resulting fluorescent compounds will be tested
for fluorescent characteristics to provide further insight into the effects that
structural modification has on the fluorophore’s attractive photochemical
properties.