The formation of the base pair adenine-uracil at a water−solid interface, at an immobilized monolayer
of adenine disulfide with adenine groups exposed to the very surface, respectively, is shown here. To overcome
the steric hindrance of tightly packed adenine groups in a pure adenine thiolate monolayer on gold, the formation
of self-assembled monolayers out of a binary mixture of the adenine disulfide and CH3- or OH-terminated
thiols are investigated. Electro-chemical investigations, surface plasmon spectroscopy (PSP, plasmon surface
polariton), multimode waveguide-PSP-coupling spectroscopy, contact angle measurements, and spontaneous
desorption time-of-flight mass spectrometry were used to characterize the monolayers. The specific base pairing
was investigated for a variety of monolayer compositions. A specific base pairing was successful for an optimized
mixed adenine/OH-terminated thiol monolayer. Nevertheless unspecific binding is a problem.
Porphyrins have been widely utilized as biochemical and biological functional chromophores which can operate under visible-light irradiation. Water-soluble porphyrins have been used as the drug for photodynamic therapy (PDT) and photodynamic inactivation (PDI). Although usual water-solubilization of porphyrins has been achieved by an introduction of an ionic group such as ammonium, pyridinium, sulfonate, phosphonium, or carboxyl to porphyrin ring, we proposed the preparation of water-soluble P and Sb porphyrins by modification of axial ligands. Alkyl (type A), ethylenedioxy (type E), pyridinium (type P), and glucosyl groups (type G) were introduced to axial ligands of Sb and P porphyrins to achieve water-solubilization of Sb porphyrin and P porphyrins. Here, we review their water-soluble P and Sb porphyrins from the standpoints of preparation, bioaffinity, and photosensitized inactivation.
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