Distinguishing the responsive mechanisms of fluorescent probes to hydrogen peroxide, proteins, and DNA/RNA
Abstract
The responsive mechanisms of cationic quinolinium-vinyl-N,N-dimethylaniline boronate (QVD-B) derivative probes to hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), proteins and DNA/RNA are theoretically investigated in this study. The potential energy curves of QVD-B scanned on a dihedral angle (N+–C–C
C) in the first singlet (S1) state exhibit large torsional energy barriers. Additionally, the energy of the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO) of an acceptor moiety (−3.14 eV) is lower than that of a donor moiety (−1.13 eV) in QVD-B. This demonstrates that photoinduced electron transfer (PET) quenches the fluorescence of QVD-B, as opposed to the previous report of intramolecular single-bond rotation. After reacting with H2O2, the reaction product of quinoline-vinyl-N,N-dimethylaniline (QVD) turns off the PET pathway and turns on the fluorescence at 550 nm, which is consistent with the experimental results (580 nm). Among the possible configurations of QVD-B that forms with proteins and DNA, the calculated fluorescence values of corresponding twisted QVD-B-P (638 nm) and QVD-B-D (686 nm) are consistent with the experimental results (632 and 688 nm). The frontier molecular orbital and electron–hole analysis show that the charge transfer distance follows the order of QVD (1.88 Å) < QVD-B-P (4.49 Å) < QVD-B-D (6.39 Å), which induces the fluorescence red-shifts of QVD-B-P and QVD-B-D compared to that of QVD. The multi-detection mechanism of the fluorescent probe QVD-B is attributed to PET progress and different degrees of local charge transfer after photoexcitation.
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