In this work the first phenazine derivatives with guanidino substituents were prepared and their structural and electronic properties studied in detail. The guanidino groups decrease the HOMO-LUMO gap, massively increase the quantum yield for fluorescence and offer sites for metal coordination. The yellow-orange colored 2,3,7,8-tetraguanidino-substituted phenazine shows intense fluorescence. The wavelength of the fluorescence signal is strongly solvent dependent, covering a region from 515 nm in Et2O solution (with a record quantum yield of 0.39 in Et2O) to 640 nm in water. 2,3-Bisguanidino-substituted phenazine is less fluorescent (maximum quantum yield of 0.17 in THF), but exhibits extremely large Stokes shifts. In contrast, guanidino-functionalized fluorenes emit only very weakly. Subsequently, the influence of coordination on the electronic properties and especially the fluorescence of the phenazine system was analysed. Coordination first takes place at the guanidino groups, and leads to a blue shift of the luminescence signal as well as a massive decrease of the luminescence lifetime. Luminescence is almost quenched completely upon Cu(I) coordination. On the other hand, in the case of Zn(II) coordination the fluorescence signal remains strong (quantum yield of 0.36 in CH3CN). In the case of strong zinc Lewis acids, an excess of metal compound leads to additional coordination at the phenazine N atoms. This is accompanied by significant red-shifts of the lowest-energy transition in the absorption and fluorescence spectra. Pentanuclear complexes with two phenazine units were isolated and structurally characterized, and further aggregation leads to chain polymers.
Beyond their use in analytical chemistry fluorescent probes continuously gain importance because of recent applications of single-molecule fluorescence spectroscopy to monitor elementary reaction steps. In this context, we characterized quenching of a fluorescent probe by different metal ions with fluorescence spectroscopy in the bulk and at the single-molecule level. We apply a quantitative model to explain deviations from existing standard models for fluorescence quenching. The model is based on a reversible transition from a bright to a dim state upon binding of the metal ion. We use the model to estimate the stability constants of complexes with different metal ions and the change of the relative quantum yield of different reporter dye labels. We found ensemble data to agree widely with results from single-molecule experiments. Our data indicates a mechanism involving close molecular contact of dye and quenching moiety which we also found in molecular dynamics simulations. We close the manuscript with a discussion of possible mechanisms based on Förster distances and electrochemical potentials which renders photo-induced electron transfer to be more likely than Förster resonance energy transfer.
Recent developments in biology demand an increasing number of simultaneously imaged structures with standard fluorescence microscopy. However, the number of multiplexed channels is limited for most multiplexing modalities, such as spectral multiplexing or fluorescence-lifetime imaging. We propose extending the number of imaging channels by using chemical reactions, controlling the emissive state of fluorescent dyes. As proof of concept, we reversibly switch a fluorescent copper sensor to enable successive imaging of two different structures in the same spectral channel. We also show that this chemical multiplexing is orthogonal to existing methods. By using two different dyes, we combine chemical with spectral multiplexing for the simultaneous imaging of four different structures with only two spectrally different channels. We characterize and discuss the approach and provide perspectives for extending imaging modalities in stimulated emission depletion microscopy, for which spectral multiplexing is technically demanding.
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