We have demonstrated the installation of a fluorescence property into a nonfluorescent precursor and modulation of an emission response of a pyrene fluorophore via click reaction. The synthesized fluorophores show different solvatochromicity and/or intramolecular charge transfer (ICT) feature as is revealed from the UV-visible, fluorescence photophysical properties of these fluorophores, and DFT/TDDFT calculation. We observed that some of the synthesized fluorophores showed purely ICT character while emission from some of them arose from the LE state. A structureless and solvent polarity-sensitive dual emission behavior was observed for one of the triazolylpyrene fluorophores that contains an electron-donating -NMe(2) substituent (fluorophore, 7a). Conversely, triazolylpyrene with an electron-withdrawing -CN group (fluorophore, 7b) showed a solvent polarity-independent vibronic emission. The effect of ICT on the photophysical properties of these fluorophores was studied by fluorescence emission spectra and DFT/TDDFT calculations. Fluorescence lifetimes were also measured in different solvents. All of our findings revealed the delicate interplay of structure and emission properties and thus having broader general utility. As the CT to LE intensity ratio can be employed as a sensing index, the dual emissive fluorophore can be utilized in designing the molecular recognition system too. We envisage that our investigation is of importance for the development of new fluorophores with predetermined photophysical properties that may find a wide range of applications in chemistry, biology, and material sciences.
Antimicrobial peptides are ubiquitous in multicellular organisms and have served as defense mechanisms for their successful evolution and throughout their life cycle. These peptides are short cationic amphiphilic polypeptides of fewer than 50 amino acids containing either a few disulfide-linked cysteine residues with a characteristic β-sheet-rich structure or linear α-helical conformations with hydrophilic side chains at one side of the helix and hydrophobic side chains on the other side. Antimicrobial peptides cause bacterial cell lysis either by direct cellsurface damage via electrostatic interactions between the cationic side chains of the peptide and the negatively charged cell surface, or by indirect modulation of the host defense systems. Electrostatic interactions lead to bacterial cell membrane disruption followed by leakage of cellular components and finally bacterial cell death. Because of their unusual mechanism of cell damage, antimicrobial peptides are effective against drug-resistant bacteria and may therefore prove more effective than classical antibiotics in certain cases. Currently, around 3000 natural antimicrobial peptides from six kingdoms (bacteria, archaea, protists, fungi, plants, and animals) have been isolated and sequenced. However, only a few of them are under clinical trials and/or in the commercial development stage for the treatment of bacterial infections caused by antibiotic-resistant bacteria. Moreover, high structural complexity, poor pharmacokinetic properties, and low antibacterial activity of natural antimicrobial peptides hinder their progress in drug development. To overcome these hurdles, researchers have become increasingly interested in modification and nature-inspired synthetic antimicrobial peptides. This review discusses some of the recent studies reported on antimicrobial peptides.
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