We describe the synthesis of two
metal-coordinating ligands that
present one or two lipoic acid (LA) anchors, a hydrophilic polyethylene
glycol (PEG) segment and a terminal reactive group made of an azide
or an aldehyde, two functionalities with great utility in bio-orthogonal
coupling techniques. These ligands were introduced onto the QD surfaces
using a combination of photochemical ligation and mixed cap exchange
strategy, where control over the fraction of azide and aldehyde groups
per nanocrystal can be easily achieved: LA-PEG-CHO, LA-PEG-N3, and bis(LA)-PEG-CHO. We then demonstrate the application of two
novel bio-orthogonal coupling strategies directly on luminescent quantum
dot (QD) surfaces that use click chemistry and hydrazone ligation
under catalyst-free conditions. We applied the highly efficient hydrazone
ligation to couple 2-hydrozinopyridine (2-HP) to aldehyde-functionalized
QDs, which produces a stable hydrazone chromophore with a well-defined
optical signature. This unique optical feature has enabled us to extract
a measure for the ligand density on the QDs for a few distinct sizes
and for different ligand architectures, namely mono-LA-PEG and bis(LA)-PEG.
We found that the foot-print-area per ligand was unaffected by the
nanocrystal size but strongly depended on the ligand coordination
number. Additionally, we showed that when the two bio-orthogonal functionalities
(aldehyde and azide) are combined on the same QD platform, the nanocrystal
can be specifically reacted with two distinct targets and with great
specificity. This design yields QD platforms with distinct chemoselectivities
that are greatly promising for use as carriers for in vivo imaging
and delivery.