3 research outputs found

    Auswirkungen des Stabex-Systems auf die Stabilität der Exporterlöse - Eine empirische Analyse zum Nutzen partieller Stabilisierungselemente

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    Dyes with near-red emission are of great interest because of their undoubted advantages for use as probes in living cells. In-depth knowledge of their photophysics is essential for employment of such dyes. In this article, the photophysical behavior of a new silicon-substituted xanthene, 7-hydroxy-5,5-dimethyl-10-(<i>o</i>-tolyl)­dibenzo­[<i>b</i>,<i>e</i>]­silin-3­(5<i>H</i>)-one (<b>2-Me TM</b>), was explored by means absorption, steady-state, and time-resolved fluorescence. First, the near-neutral pH, ground-state acidity constant of the dye, p<i>K</i><sub>N‑A</sub>, was determined by absorbance and steady-state fluorescence at very low buffer concentrations. Next, we determined whether the addition of phosphate buffer promoted the excited-state proton-transfer (ESPT) reaction among the neutral and anion form of <b>2-Me TM</b> in aqueous solutions at near-neutral pH. For this analysis, both the steady-state fluorescence method and time-resolved emission spectroscopy (TRES) were employed. The TRES experiments demonstrated a remarkably favored conversion of the neutral form to the anion form. Then, the values of the excited-state rate constants were determined by global analysis of the fluorescence decay traces recorded as a function of pH, and buffer concentration. The revealed kinetic parameters were consistent with the TRES results, exhibiting a higher rate constant for deprotonation than for protonation, which implies an unusual low value of the excited-state acidity constant <i>pK</i>*<sub>N‑A</sub> and therefore an enhanced photoacid behavior of the neutral form. Finally, we determined whether <b>2-Me TM</b> could be used as a sensor inside live cells by measuring the intensity profile of the probe in different cellular compartments of HeLa 229 cells

    Ti(III)-Catalyzed Cyclizations of Ketoepoxypolyprenes: Control over the Number of Rings and Unexpected Stereoselectivities

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    We describe a new strategy to control the number of cyclization steps in bioinspired radical (poly)­cyclizations involving epoxypolyenes containing keto units positioned along the polyene chain. This approach provides an unprecedentedly straightforward access to natural terpenoids with pendant unsaturated side chains. Additionally, in the case of bi- and tricyclizations, decalins with <i>cis</i> stereochemistry have been obtained as a consequence of the presence of the ketone. The preferential formation of <i>cis</i>-fused adducts was rationalized using DFT calculations. This result is completely unprecedented in biomimetic cyclizations and permits the access to natural terpenoids with this stereochemistry, as well as to non-natural analogues

    Ti(III)-Catalyzed Cyclizations of Ketoepoxypolyprenes: Control over the Number of Rings and Unexpected Stereoselectivities

    No full text
    We describe a new strategy to control the number of cyclization steps in bioinspired radical (poly)­cyclizations involving epoxypolyenes containing keto units positioned along the polyene chain. This approach provides an unprecedentedly straightforward access to natural terpenoids with pendant unsaturated side chains. Additionally, in the case of bi- and tricyclizations, decalins with <i>cis</i> stereochemistry have been obtained as a consequence of the presence of the ketone. The preferential formation of <i>cis</i>-fused adducts was rationalized using DFT calculations. This result is completely unprecedented in biomimetic cyclizations and permits the access to natural terpenoids with this stereochemistry, as well as to non-natural analogues
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