Chemically
modified biomacromoleculesi.e., proteins, nucleic
acids, glycans, and lipidshave become crucial tools in chemical
biology. They are extensively used not only to elucidate cellular
processes but also in industrial applications, particularly in the
context of biopharmaceuticals. In order to enable maximum scope for
optimization, it is pivotal to have a diverse array of biomacromolecule
modification methods at one’s disposal. Chemistry has driven
many significant advances in this area, and especially recently, numerous
novel visible-light-induced photochemical approaches have emerged.
In these reactions, light serves as an external source of energy,
enabling access to highly reactive intermediates under exceedingly
mild conditions and with exquisite spatiotemporal control. While UV-induced
transformations on biomacromolecules date back decades, visible light
has the unmistakable advantage of being considerably more biocompatible,
and a spectrum of visible-light-driven methods is now available,
chiefly for proteins and nucleic acids. This review will discuss modifications
of native functional groups (FGs), including functionalization, labeling,
and cross-linking techniques as well as the utility of oxidative degradation
mediated by photochemically generated reactive oxygen species. Furthermore,
transformations at non-native, bioorthogonal FGs on biomacromolecules
will be addressed, including photoclick chemistry and DNA-encoded
library synthesis as well as methods that allow manipulation of the
activity of a biomacromolecule.
Generation of fluoromethyl radicals via visible light-mediated halogen atom transfer activation of fluoroiodomethane facilitates both the multicomponent synthesis of α-fluoromethyl amines and the hydrofluoromethylation of electron-deficient alkenes.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.