67385-10-8Relevant articles and documents
Photodisulfidation of alkenes with linear disulfides: Reaction scope and kinetics
Kamps, Joshua T.,Soars, Shafer M.,Bongiardina, Nichloas J.,Fairbanks, Benjamin D.,Bowman, Christopher N.
, (2022/03/07)
Thiol-ene and thiol-yne photomediated conjugations have received substantial attention in research and in practice. Herein is presented the photodisulfidation of alkenes based on the radical-mediated 1:1 reaction of a disulfide and a vinyl ether, which provides an additional route for the formation of the types of sulfides seen in thiol-ene and thiol-yne polymers. Although similar linkages are formed, this approach starting with disulfides is expected to have benefits over the thiol-ene and thiol-yne reactions including extended shelf life of disulfides compared to thiols, reduced shrinkage stress, and increased refractive index of the resulting materials. It was determined that vinyl ethers were the only alkenes capable of undergoing photodisulfidation under ambient conditions and in reasonable timescales. The reaction between vinyl ethers and disulfides performed well in a variety of solvents providing modest to excellent yields (100% for bis(1-methylacetate) disulfide (DSMA)/triethyleneglycol divinylether (TEGDVE)) for numerous disulfide substrates evaluated. It was determined that the mechanism of the photodisulfidation reaction involves an auto-propagating cycle of thiyl radicals which add into either end of a vinyl ether to form thio-ether and thio-acetal linkages in the final product. Finally, although the reaction rate is slower than that of the thiol-ene reaction, the photodisulfidation reaction proceeds relatively rapidly under the explored conditions.
Selective, Modular Probes for Thioredoxins Enabled by Rational Tuning of a Unique Disulfide Structure Motif
Becker, Katja,Busker, Sander,Felber, Jan G.,Maier, Martin S.,Poczka, Lena,Scholzen, Karoline,Theisen, Ulrike,Thorn-Seshold, Julia,Thorn-Seshold, Oliver,Zeisel, Lukas,Arnér, Elias S. J.,Brandst?dter, Christina
supporting information, p. 8791 - 8803 (2021/06/27)
Specialized cellular networks of oxidoreductases coordinate the dithiol/disulfide-exchange reactions that control metabolism, protein regulation, and redox homeostasis. For probes to be selective for redox enzymes and effector proteins (nM to μM concentrations), they must also be able to resist non-specific triggering by the ca. 50 mM background of non-catalytic cellular monothiols. However, no such selective reduction-sensing systems have yet been established. Here, we used rational structural design to independently vary thermodynamic and kinetic aspects of disulfide stability, creating a series of unusual disulfide reduction trigger units designed for stability to monothiols. We integrated the motifs into modular series of fluorogenic probes that release and activate an arbitrary chemical cargo upon reduction, and compared their performance to that of the literature-known disulfides. The probes were comprehensively screened for biological stability and selectivity against a range of redox effector proteins and enzymes. This design process delivered the first disulfide probes with excellent stability to monothiols yet high selectivity for the key redox-Active protein effector, thioredoxin. We anticipate that further applications of these novel disulfide triggers will deliver unique probes targeting cellular thioredoxins. We also anticipate that further tuning following this design paradigm will enable redox probes for other important dithiol-manifold redox proteins, that will be useful in revealing the hitherto hidden dynamics of endogenous cellular redox systems.
Cyclic telluride reagents with remarkable glutathione peroxidase-like activity for purification-free synthesis of highly pure organodisulfides
Arai, Kenta,Osaka, Yuui,Haneda, Masahiro,Sato, Yuumi
, p. 3647 - 3655 (2019/07/22)
Monoamino cyclic tellurides with a five- or six-membered ring structure and their derivatives were developed as a new class of catalyst for the oxidation of organothiols to organodisulfides in a glutathione peroxidase-like catalytic reaction. Quantitative conversion and high reaction rate were achieved by performing the reaction in an organic-aqueous segmented microflow system. Importantly, the process circumvented product purification, which is a major limitation of current organodisulfide synthetic methods.