Small-Molecule-Selective Organosilica Nanoreactors For Copper-Catalyzed Azide-Alkyne Cycloaddition Reactions In Cellular And Living Systems

NANO LETTERS(2021)

Cited 12|Views8
No score
Abstract
We reported the synthesis of a tris(triazolylmethyl)amine (TTA)-bridged organosilane, functioning as Cu(I)-stabilizing ligands, and the installation of this building block into the backbone of mesoporous organosilica nanoparticles (TTASi) by a sol-gel way. Upon coordinating with Cu(I), the mesoporous Cu-I-TTASi, with a restricted metal active center inside the pore, functions as a molecular-sieve-typed nanoreactor to efficiently perform Cu(I)-catalyzed alkyne-azide cycloaddition (CuAAC) reactions on small-molecule substrates but fails to work on macromolecules larger than the pore diameter. As a proof of concept, we witnessed the advantages of selective nanoreactors in screening protein substrates for small molecules. Also, the robust Cu-I-TTASi could be implanted into the body of animal models including zebrafish and mice as biorthogonal catalysts without apparent toxicity, extending its utilization in vivo ranging from fluorescent labeling to in situ drug synthesis.
More
Translated text
Key words
Bioorthogonal Catalysis, In Situ Drug Synthesis, Mesoporous Organosilicon, Copper, Molecular Sieve
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined