SUMMARY
Molecular encoding in sequence-defined polymers shows promise as a new paradigm for data storage. Here, we report what is, to our knowledge, the first use of self-immolative oligourethanes for storing and reading encoded information. As a proof of principle, we describe how a text passage from Jane Austen’s
Mansfield Park
was encoded in sequence-defined oligourethanes and reconstructed via self-immolative sequencing. We develop Mol.E-coder, a software tool that uses a Huffman encoding scheme to convert the character table to hexadecimal. The oligourethanes are then generated by a high-throughput parallel synthesis. Sequencing of the oligourethanes by self-immolation is done concurrently in a parallel fashion, and the liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) information decoded by our Mol.E-decoder software. The passage is capable of being reproduced wholly intact by a third-party, without any purifications or the use of tandem MS (MS/MS), despite multiple rounds of compression, encoding, and synthesis.
A base-catalyzed
direct oxidation of rhodamine, carborhodamine,
and siliconrhodamine pyronines to the corresponding xanthones is studied.
This methodology utilizes addition of water to split pyronines into
xanthone and reduced xanthene, the latter of which is returned to
pyronine by oxidation with iodine. The transformation is general,
working on the three most recalcitrant versions of N,N,N′,N′-tetramethylpyronines in good to excellent yields.
A synthesis of the carbopyronine dye Carboxy ATTO 647N
from simple
materials is reported. This route proceeds in 11 forward steps from
3-bromoaniline with the key xanthone intermediate formed using a new
oxidation methodology. The step utilizes an oxidation cycle with base,
water, iodine, and more than doubles the yield of the standard permanganate
oxidation methodology, accessing gram-scale quantities of this late-stage
product. From this, Carboxy ATTO 647N was prepared in only four additional
steps. This facile route to a complex fluorophore is expected to enable
further studies in fluorescence imaging.
A peptide sequencing scheme utilizing fluorescence microscopy and Edman degradation to determine the amino acid position in fluorophorelabeled peptides was recently reported, referred to as fluorosequencing. It was observed that multiple fluorophores covalently linked to a peptide scaffold resulted in a decrease in the anticipated fluorescence output and worsened the single-molecule fluorescence analysis. In this study, we report an improvement in the photophysical properties of fluorophore-labeled peptides by incorporating long and flexible (PEG) 10 linkers at the peptide attachment points. Long linkers to the fluorophores were installed using copper-catalyzed azide−alkyne cycloaddition conditions. The photophysical properties of these peptides were analyzed in solution and immobilized on a microscope slide at the singlemolecule level under peptide fluorosequencing conditions. Solution-phase fluorescence analysis showed improvements in both quantum yield and fluorescence lifetime with the long linkers. While on the solid support, photometry measurements showed significant increases in fluorescence brightness and 20 to 60% improvements in the ability to determine the amino acid position with fluorosequencing. This spatial distancing strategy demonstrates improvements in the peptide sequencing platform and provides a general approach for improving the photophysical properties in fluorophore-labeled macromolecules.
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