Homochiral mesoporous anodic aluminum
oxide membranes (AAO) were
prepared by coating protected chiral D/L aspartic acid appended polyfluorene
in the pores. These chiral AAO membranes successfully demonstrated
enantioselective recognition and separation of a range of amino acids
from their aqueous racemic mixture by simple filtration. Enantioselective
separation was achieved by selective adsorption of one enantiomer
from the aqueous racemic mixture into the chiral pores of the AAO
membrane leaving the filtrate enriched with the other enantiomer.
Extraction and quantification of the adsorbed amino acid (glutamic
acid) demonstrated that 1 mg of homochiral polyfluorene could effectively
extract about 3.5 mg of glutamic acid with 95% enantiomeric excess
in 24 h. This is one of the highest enantiomeric excesses (ee %) and
yields reported so far in the literature for a racemic mixture of
glutamic acid. The pore size of the AAO membrane influenced the efficiency
of separation with a reduction in pore size from 200 to 20 nm leading
to reduced ee % (∼95% to ∼28%). These results raise
the possibility for a facile method to carry out enantioselective
separation.
The synthetically modified green fluorescent protein chromophore analogue 3,4,5-trimethoxybenzylidene imidazolinone (1) yielded five polymorphs (I, II, III, IV, V) concomitantly irrespective of the solvent used for crystallization. The pentamorphic modification of 1 is solely due to the interplay of iso-energetic weak intermolecular interactions in molecular associations as well as the conformational flexibility offered by a C—C single bond, which connects the electron-deficient moiety imidazolinone with the electron-rich trimethoxybenzylidene group. A common structural feature observed in all the polymorphs is the formation of a `zero-dimensional' centrosymmetric dimeric unit through a short and linear C—H...O hydrogen bond engaging phenyl C—H and imidazolinone carbonyl oxygen. However, the networking of these dimeric units showed a subtle difference in all the polymorphs. The 2D isostructurality was observed between polymorphs I, II and III, while the other two polymorphs IV and V revealed only `zero-dimensional' isostructurality. The different fluorescence emissions of Form I (blue) and Forms II to V (yellow) were attributed to the differences in π-stacking interactions. It shows that one can modulate the photophysical properties of these smart materials by slightly altering their crystal structure. Such an approach will aid in developing new multi-colour organic fluorescent materials of varying crystal structures for live-cell imaging and fluorescent sensing applications.
We have demonstrated the first example of highly selective sensing and bioimaging of Fe2+ in living HeLa cells using a biocompatible glutamic acid appended polyfluorene via selective chelation of amine and acid groups with Fe2+.
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