posted on 2017-04-24, 13:03authored bySina Elahipanah, Paul J. O’Brien, Dmitry Rogozhnikov, Muhammad N. Yousaf
The
development of methods for conjugating a range of molecules
to primary amine functional groups has revolutionized the fields of
chemistry, biology, and material science. The primary amine is a key
functional group and one of the most important nucleophiles and bases
used in all of synthetic chemistry. Therefore, tremendous interest
in the synthesis of molecules containing primary amines and strategies
to devise chemical reactions to react with primary amines has been
at the core of chemical research. In particular, primary amines are
a ubiquitous functional group found in biological systems as free
amino acids, as key side chain lysines in proteins, and in signaling
molecules and metabolites and are also present in many natural product
classes. Due to its abundance, the primary amine is the most convenient
functional group handle in molecules for ligation to other molecules
for a broad range of applications that impact all scientific fields.
Because of the primary amine’s central importance in synthetic
chemistry, acid–base chemistry, redox chemistry, and biology,
many methods have been developed to efficiently react with primary
amines, including activated carboxylic acids, isothiocyanates, Michael
addition type systems, and reaction with ketones or aldehydes followed
by in situ reductive amination. Herein, we introduce a new traceless,
high-yield, fast click-chemistry method based on the rapid and efficient
trapping of amine groups via a functionalized dialdehyde group. The
click reaction occurs in mild conditions in organic solvents or aqueous
media and proceeds in high yield, and the starting dialdehyde reagent
and resulting dialdehyde click conjugates are stable. Moreover, no
catalyst or dialdehyde-activating group is required, and the only
byproduct is water. The initial dialdehyde and the resulting conjugate
are both straightforward to characterize, and the reaction proceeds
with high atom economy. To demonstrate the broad scope of this new
click-conjugation strategy, we designed a straightforward scheme to
synthesize a suite of dialdehyde reagents. The dialdehyde molecules
were used for applications in cell-surface engineering and for tailoring
surfaces for material science applications. We anticipate the broad
utility of the general dialdehyde click chemistry to primary amines
in all areas of chemical research, ranging from polymers and bioconjugation
to material science and nanoscience.