Joshua L.
Turnbull
a,
Ryan P.
Golden
a,
Brittany R.
Benlian
b,
Katharine M.
Henn
c,
Soren M.
Lipman
a and
Evan W.
Miller
*abc
aDepartment of Chemistry, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720-1460, USA. E-mail: evanwmiller@berkeley.edu
bDepartment of Molecular & Cell Biology, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720-1460, USA
cHelen Wills Neuroscience Institute, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720-1460, USA
First published on 5th October 2023
Since their discovery in 1887, rhodamines have become indispensable fluorophores for biological imaging. Recent studies have extensively explored heteroatom substitution at the 10′ position and a variety of substitution patterns on the 3′,6′ nitrogens. Although 3-carboxy- and 3-sulfono-rhodamines were first reported in the 19th century, the 3-phosphono analogues have never been reported. Here, we report a mild, scalable synthetic route to 3-phosphonorhodamines. We explore the substrate scope and investigate mechanistic details of an exogenous acid-free condensation. Tetramethyl-3-phosphonorhodamine (phosTMR) derivatives can be accessed on the 1.5 mmol scale in up to 98% yield (2 steps). phosTMR shows a 12- to 500-fold increase in water solubility relative to 3-carboxy and 3-sulfonorhodamine derivatives and has excellent chemical stability. Additionally, phosphonates allow for chemical derivatization; esterification of phosTMR facilitates intracellular delivery with localization profiles that differ from 3-carboxyrhodamines. The free phosphonate can be incorporated into a molecular wire scaffold to create a phosphonated rhodamine voltage reporter, phosphonoRhoVR. PhosRhoVR 1 can be synthesized in just 6 steps, with an overall yield of 37% to provide >400 mg of material, compared to a 6-step, ∼2% yield for the previously reported RhoVR 1. PhosRhoVR 1 possesses excellent voltage sensitivity (37% ΔF/F) and a 2-fold increase in cellular brightness compared to RhoVR 1.
Modification of the structure of rhodamines can produce dramatic changes in the functional properties of the dyes (Scheme 1). Changing the alkylation pattern on the 3′ and 6′ amines tunes absorption and emission wavelengths,4 fused cyclohexanes or 4-membered azetidine rings improve brightness,5 and heteroatom substitution of the 10′ oxygen atom results in a red shift.6–14 Additionally, the delocalized positive charge of rhodamine facilitates cell permeability, making rhodamines attractive scaffolds for intracellular or live-cell imaging applications.15
Substitutions of the rhodamine core have been extensively explored for the modulation of photophysical properties. On the other hand, substitutions at the 3-position of the pendant aryl ring – which include carboxylates, amides, sulfonates, methyl, and substituted methylenes – largely impact subsequent applications of rhodamine fluorophores. We recently disclosed a new class of fluoresceins with 3-phosphonate substitutions. 3-Phosphonofluoresceins exhibit an almost 2-fold improvement in water solubility compared to 3-carboxy analogs,16 and functionalization of the 3-phosphonate with esters improves cellular brightness 70-fold over traditional 3-carboxyfluorescein. Owing to the orthogonality of the xanthene core and the pendant ring, physical changes brought by 3-phosphonate substitution were facilitated without compromising brightness or excitation/emission wavelengths. Expansion of 3-phosphonate substitution to rhodamines may yield additional opportunities in the applications of xanthene fluorophores.
Despite almost 140 years since the first rhodamine was synthesized, synthetic approaches often lack generalizability with respect to varying 3-substitution. In fact, rhodamines are largely constructed by variations of the initially reported Friedel–Crafts condensation.17,18 Phthalic anhydrides are heated with aminophenols in the presence of Brønsted or Lewis acids; however, functionalized phthalides often lead to mixture of regioisomers that are difficult to separate.19 To solve this problem, benzaldehydes can be condensed with aminophenols followed by dehydration and in situ oxidation with exposure to air or use of an organic oxidant such as chloranil.18 The harsh nature of these condensations often results in low yields, functional group incompatibility and troublesome purifications.1,20,21 While the acidic conditions present in all of these reaction schemes increase reactivity of the electrophile, protonation, or Lewis acid complexation, with the aniline decreases the nucleophilicity of aminophenols. An elegant recent example showed that intramolecular activation of the benzaldehyde by an ortho carboxylic acid could furnish rhodamines in high yields without the addition of an acid catalyst.22
Contemporary methods to access rhodamines make use of Pd-catalyzed C–N cross coupling of fluorescein ditriflates with various amines,23 addition of aryl organometallic species into N-alkylated diaminoxanthones,24,25 or addition of dimetallated bisphenyl ethers into electrophiles such as aryl esters or phthalic anhydrides.10,26 While these methods alleviate some of the challenges associated with classic rhodamine condensations, their applications to the synthesis of rhodamines with acidic 3-functionalities (such as phosphonates) are limited.
Here, we report a mild synthesis of 3-phosphonorhodamines in exceptional yields from the condensation of aminophenols and 2-phosphonobenzaldehyde (Scheme 1). 3-Phosphonorhodamines can be synthesized on a 1.5 mmol scale, often without the need for chromatography, alleviating many of the challenges associated with purification of charged fluorophores. The 3-phosphonorhodamines have nearly identical optical properties compared to their classic 3-carboxy- and sulfono-counterparts but possess a >10- to 500-fold increase in water solubility. The tetramethyl-substituted 3-phosphonorhodamine can be applied to diverse cellular imaging contexts. First, esterification of the phosphonate controls cellular localization, and tetramethylphosphonorhodamine shows enhanced cellular brightness compared to the analogous 3-carboxyrhodamine. Next, 3-phosphonorhodamines can be localized to plasma membranes and used for voltage imaging, where they show comparable voltage sensitivity and a 2-fold increase in cellular brightness compared to carboxy-based indicators.
By analogy to this previous report,22 acidic phosphonates may equip 2-phosphonobenzaldehyde (1) with similar intramolecular aldehyde activation and provide a path to 3-phosphonorhodamines in the absence of exogenous acid. This is the case. Heating of 1 with 3-(dimethylamino)phenol, 2, in 2,2,2-trifluoroethanol (TFE) results in clean precipitation of triarylmethane 9 in an excellent 98% yield. 9 can be isolated by precipitation and undergoes quantitative dehydration and oxidation to the corresponding rhodamine 16 (Scheme 2).
In previous studies, the analogous reaction with 2-carboxybenzaldehyde required TFE to achieve appreciable yields.22 This is likely a result of stabilization of the benzhydrilium intermediate by the high ionizing power, low nucleophilicity, and hydrogen bond donating ability of fluorinated alcohols (such as TFE) compared to hydrocarbon-based alcohols.22,28–30 As in previous studies,22 the reaction between 1 and 2 in TFE produces 9 in high yields (Scheme 3 and Table 1). However, the reaction of 1 and 2 in methanol also produces 9 in moderate yield (up to 58%, Scheme 3 and Table 1). This increased reactivity is likely a result of the greater extent of intramolecular activation of aldehyde 1 compared to 2-carboxybenzaldehyde. NMR studies support this hypothesis: 2-phosphonobenzaldehyde (1) shows a greater propensity to form the corresponding hemiacetal in nucleophilic solvents such as CD3OD (Table S1 and Scheme S1†). Aryl phosphonates generally have pKa1 values that are about 2 pH units lower than the corresponding benzoic acid pKa.31 The low pKa of the phosphonate may also contribute to greater stabilization of the benzhydrilium intermediate.
Aniline | Product | Conditions | Yielda | |
---|---|---|---|---|
a Isolated yields. b Performed under a nitrogen atmosphere. | ||||
2 | 9 | TFE, 80 °C, 16 hb | 98% | |
MeOH, 60 °C, 16 h | 58% | |||
MeOH, rt, 16 h | 22% | |||
3 | 10 | TFE, 80 °C, 16 h | 96% | |
MeOH, rt 16 h | 27% | |||
4 | 11 | TFE, 80 °C, 16 h | 99% | |
5 | 12 | TFE 80 °C, 16 hb | 89% | |
6 | 13 | TFE, 80 °C, 16 hb | 92% | |
MeOH, rt, 16 h | 65% | |||
7 | 14 | TFE, 80 °C, 16 h | 97% |
To examine the generalizability of this synthetic approach, we exposed aldehyde 1 to a series of anilines, 2 to 7, under the same conditions (TFE, 80 °C, 16 hours) and observe precipitation of triarylmethanes 9 to 14 in excellent yields, ranging from 89 to 99% (Table 1). The exceptional yields of 9 to 14 are likely due in part to the insolubility of the triarylmethanes in alcoholic solvents. Friedel–Crafts condensations are reversible, as evidenced by the degradation of the triarylmethane intermediates in the presence of acid.32 Precipitation from the reaction medium drives reaction progression and contributes to the near quantitative yields. For more soluble intermediates, like 13, performing the reaction under an inert atmosphere improves the yield, by avoiding premature oxidation to the final rhodamine, which would otherwise complicate purification at this stage (Table 1).
Some substrates are not compatible with this methodology. Reaction of 1 with resorcinols does not yield the corresponding phosphonofluorescein. Instead, the reaction produces just a single addition of resorcinol to 1. Electron-rich anilines may be required to stabilize the benhzydrilium intermediate and promote a 2nd Friedel–Crafts addition (Scheme 2).
Further, azetidines are not currently compatible. Alcoholic solvents promote cationic ring opening polymerization of azetidines.33 Use of azetidine-substituted aminophenol 8 – which would provide a mild route to phosphono JaneliaFluor intermediate 15 – gives an intractable solid precipitate under our current reaction conditions (Scheme S2†).
After isolating triarylmethane intermediates 9 to 14 in high yields and purity, we examined conditions for the dehydration and oxidation to the corresponding 3-phosphonorhomdamines 16 to 21 (Scheme 4).
In most cases, reflux in methanol with p-chloranil as an oxidant leads to cyclization and oxidation to the corresponding rhodamine. As dehydration and oxidation to the rhodamines occurs, solubility in methanol increases and so reaction progression can be easily monitored by the dissolution of visible particulates. Reaction times vary from 2 to 48 hours and depend on the volume of methanol used. Upon completion, filtration removes any unoxidized fluorophore and trituration with organic solvent to remove excess chloranil yields rhodamines 16 to 19 in excellent yields (80–99%, Table 2) without need for further purification. Substrates 13 and 14 are sensitive to chloranil oxidation, leading to decomposition. Instead, reflux in methanol or DMSO with exposure to air is sufficient to promote dehydration and oxidation to rhodamines 20 and 21 respectively; however, these methods require purification by reverse phase silica chromatography. The dehydration and oxidation of 14 to phosRho110, 21, is particularly low yielding (21%), owing to the limited solubility of the fluorophore and challenging purification. An alternative synthesis through de-allylation of 19 (Scheme S3†) gives 21 in 71% yield (Table S2†).
Triarylmethane | Rhodamine | Yielda | Conditions |
---|---|---|---|
a Isolated yields. b After reverse phase silica chromatography. c 21 is also accessible by deallylation of 19 in up to 71% yield. | |||
9 | 16 phosTMR | 99% | p-Chloranil, MeOH, reflux, 2–48 h |
10 | 17 phosRhoB | 80% | p-Chloranil, MeOH, reflux, 2–48 h |
11 | 18 phosRho6G | 82% | p-Chloranil, MeOH, reflux, 2–48 h |
12 | 19 phosTAR | 93% | p-Chloranil, MeOH, reflux, 2–48 h |
13 | 20 phosJulR | 48%b | MeOH, reflux, 48 h |
14 | 21 phosRho110 | 21%b,c | DMSO, 100 °C, 12 h |
Finally, condensation of aminophenols with phosphonate monoesters are also compatible with this reaction methodology. Condensation of phosphonate monoester 22 with 2, followed by dehydration and chloranil oxidation affords rhodamine 23 in 39% yield with the ethyl ester intact (Scheme 5). Although a reduced yield compared to the 98% for 16, these results show that monoesters possess the ability to facilitate the reaction via intramolecular activation of the aldehyde. Importantly the strongly acidic conditions typically required for these condensations would result in phosphonate ester hydrolysis and thus the direct synthesis of monoester 23 is a testament to the mild nature of this chemistry. The reaction of 2 with the diethylester of 1 gives no reaction in TFE or MeOH.
The conditions used to achieve high yields of phosphonorhodamines do not translate to high yields for 2-carboxy and 2-sulfono rhodamines. While 2-carboxybenzaldehyde also provides intramolecular activation,22,27 reaction with 2 under the same conditions produces carboxyTMR in only 31% yield and requires chromatography (ESI†). This represents more than a 3-fold decrease in the yield compared to phosTMR, 16. The lower pKa of arylphosphonates compared to benzoic acids may account for the differing reactivity. On the other hand, 2-sulfonobenzaldehyde does not produce sulfoTMR under these conditions, suggesting the pKa of the arylsulfonic acid is too low and therefore has no proton to activate the aldehyde. As such, sulfoTMR was synthesized by heating with 2 in neat methanesulfonic acid in just 12% yield (ESI†).
Fig. 1 Spectroscopic characterization of tetramethylrhodamines. Normalized absorbance and fluorescence spectra (a–d) in PBS, plots of λmaxvs. pH (e–h) and corresponding chemical structures (i–l) for carboxyTMR (a, e and i), phosTMR (b, f and j), phosTMR·OEt (c, g and k) and sulfoTMR (d, h and l). pH titrations were performed in 10 mM buffered solutions (see ESI†) containing 150 mM NaCl ranging from pH 2.3 to 9.8 at a final dye concentration of 2 μM. Where applicable, titration curves were fit to sigmoidal dose response curves (solid black) to enable pKa determination (dashed red). Determined pKa values are reported next to chemical structures (i–l). |
Rhodamine | λ max /nm | λ em /nm | ε , /M−1 cm−1 | Φ | Solubilityc (mM) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
a Measured in PBS. b At maximum absorption. c Measured in PBS, values are mean ± standard deviation. | |||||
carboxyTMR | 549 | 569 | 78000 | 0.45 | 0.9 ± 0.02 |
sulfoTMR | 556 | 574 | 73000 | 0.46 | 0.02 ± 0.002 |
phosTMR, 16 | 546 | 564 | 70000 | 0.52 | 12 ± 0.6 |
phosRhoB, 17 | 553 | 570 | 75000 | 0.38 | — |
phosRho6G, 18 | 520 | 539 | 76000 | 0.95 | — |
phosTAR, 19 | 540 | 559 | 53000 | 0.68 | — |
phosJulR, 20 | 573 | 591 | 91000 | 0.99 | — |
phosRho110, 21 | 495 | 515 | 76000 | 0.98 | — |
phosTMR·OEt, 23 | 551 | 569 | 78000 | 0.51 | — |
3-phosphonorhodamine 16 has substantially improved water solubility (12 mM, PBS) compared to sulfono- and carboxyTMR (Fig. S1†). 16 is ∼500× more soluble than sulfonoTMR (0.02 mM) and ∼12× more soluble than carboxyTMR (0.9 mM) (Table 3). This is a larger improvement in solubility than phosphonofluorescein, which is ∼2× more soluble than the related carboxyfluorescein.16 While fluorescein solubility correlates well with the 3-functionality pKa, relative solubility of rhodamines appear more nuanced. In the absence of the negatively charged phenolate of fluoresceins, 3-substituents of rhodamines seem to have a greater impact on relative solubility. Improved water solubility will be a boon for applications where removal of residual fluorophore is important to improve contrast, for example, in vitro protein labelling or next generation sequencing.34–36 3-Phosphonorhodamine 16 shows exceptional stability compared to carboxyTMR. After 1 year of storage as a solid powder, under identical conditions, (at room temperature, 15–22 °C, in the dark), carboxyTMR decomposed into a complex mixture of compounds, including a substantial amount of aniline demethylation (Fig. S2†). However, phosTMR showed no signs of degradation (Fig. S3†).
The absorbance intensity of 3-phosphonorhodamines 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, and 23 at their respective λmax values are all insensitive to pH changes between pH 2 and 10 (Fig. S4†). The λmax values of carboxyTMR and phosTMR shift by 3.5 and 8 nm, respectively, as pH decreases (Fig. 1e and f). Protonation of the 3-substituent results in more electron-withdrawing inductive character of the pendant ring – giving a red-shift in absorbance, as predicted by the Dewar–Knot rules.37,38 Fitting the value of λmax to non-linear sigmoidal curves reveals a 3-carboxylate pKa of 3.4 and 3-phosphonate pKa2 of 7.3. Neither phosTMR·OEt nor sulfoTMR show a shift in absorbance wavelength λmax across this pH range, indicating their pKa values are below 2 (Fig. 1g and h).
All new 3-phosphonorhodamines, 16–21, 23 (Table 3), show characteristic rhodamine absorbance and emission spectra (Fig. S4†). As expected, changing the alkylation pattern of the anilines results in spectral tuning of the absorption and emission wavelengths from 495/515 nm (21) to 573/591 nm (20). The absorption intensity of all 3-phosphonorhodamines is insensitive to pH (between 2 and 10) and phosphonate pKa2 values range from 7.2 to 7.6 (Fig. S4a–r†). The photostabilities of 16, carboxyTMR, and sulfoTMR are indistinguishable from one another (Fig. S4v–x†).
Treatment of phosTMR 16 with either ethyl bromide or bromomethyl acetate with the presence of Ag(I) in MeCN yields esterified phosTMRs 24 and 25 in 22% and 25% yield respectively (Scheme 6). Acetoxymethyl esters are prone to hydrolysis by cellular esterases, and upon in vitro incubation with porcine liver esterase (PLE), both carboxyTMR AM and phosTMR AM, 25, show complete hydrolysis to the corresponding carboxyTMR and phosTMR (Fig. S5 and S6†). In the absence of PLE, carboxyTMR AM shows low levels of hydrolysis, while phosTMR AM 25 shows about ∼50% hydrolysis to the phosphonate monoAM ester (Fig. S5 and S6†). Diethyl ester phosTMR·2OEt 24 is resistant to hydrolysis in the presence or absence of PLE (Fig. S7†).
The identity of the phosphonate ester profoundly affects cellular localization of phosphonorhodamines. Both phosTMR 16 and monoester phosTMR·OEt 23 show negligible cellular fluorescence, since the doubly- and singly-ionized phosphonates preclude entry into cells (Fig. 2a and b). However, diesters 24 (ethyl ester) and 25 (AM ester) exhibit strong cellular fluorescence. phosTMR·2OEt 24 exhibits heterogeneous cellular localization (Fig. 2c), which appears to co-localize to mitochondria (Fig. S8†), as expected for rhodamine esters.15
On the other hand, the more labile phosTMR AM 25 displays more uniform cytosolic localization compared to either phosTMR·2OEt 24 (Fig. 2d and S8e–h†) or carboxyTMR AM (Fig. S9 and S10†). This is different from the behavior of the diethyl ester of phosTMR 24 and different from the behavior of the AM ester of traditional carboxyTMR, which localize to mitochondria (Fig. S9†). The differential cellular localization of 25 may stem from intracellular AM hydrolysis to yield phosTMR with a net negative charge (pKa2 7.3); the greater charge density of phosTMR vs. carboxyTMR (net negative vs. net neutral at pH 7.4) likely precludes localization to the mitochondria.
phosTMR AM 25 also displays excellent cellular retention (Fig. S10a–c, g†). Serial washing of stained cells showed no decrease in the fluorescence intensity of 25, up to 36 min after loading. On the other hand, after 3 washes carboxyTMR AM shows a 40% decrease in mitochondrial fluorescence intensity (Fig. S10d–f, g†), suggesting the additional negative charge provided by a 3-phosphonate enhances cellular retention.
Reaction of 5-bromo-2-phosphonobenzaldehyde 27 with 3-dimethylaminophenol in TFE, results in precipitation of triarylmethane 28 in quantitative yield (Fig. 3a). Dehydration and oxidation with chloranil gives conversion to the corresponding 6-bromo-3-phosphonotetramethyl rhodamine. This is a large increase the in yield of the condensation to 29 (>99%) relative to the 3-carboxy (57%) and 3-sulfono (44%) analogs.42,43 This reaction can be performed on at least a 1.5 mmol scale to furnish hundreds of milligrams of pure material without column chromatography.
Heck coupling of 29 to a phenylenevinylene molecular wire produces phosRhoVR 1, 30, as a crude triethylamine salt which can be purified by reverse phase silica chromatography in 76% yield (0.76 mmol, 432 mg, Fig. 3a). In the comparable synthesis of the 3-amide analog, RhoVR 1, Heck coupling to the analogous 3-carboxytetramethylrhodamine is followed by a HATU coupling with N-Boc-sarcosine and TFA deprotection, resulting in a substantially lower 9% yield over 3 steps.42 The streamlined and higher yielding synthesis of phosRhoVRs not only alleviates the time-consuming bottleneck in voltage reporter synthesis but also enables access to RhoVRs in much greater quantities (hundreds vs. tens of milligrams at a time).
phosRhoVR 1 displays characteristic absorption and emission profiles of 3-phosphono-tetramethylrhodamine, centered at 545 and 562 nm, respectively, with the addition of an absorption band at 402 nm from the molecular wire (Fig. 3b). In live HEK cells, fluorescence is localized primarily to the plasma membranes (Fig. 3c). The negatively charged phosphonate is sufficient to prevent internalization despite the positive charge of the rhodamine. phosRhoVR 1 shows a nearly 2-fold improvement in cellular brightness compared to RhoVR 1, when loaded under identical conditions (500 nM, Fig. S11†). Patch clamp electrophysiology coupled with fluorescence microscopy reveals a voltage sensitivity of 37% ΔF/F per 100 mV for phosRhoVR 1 (Fig. 3d and e), which is comparable but lower than the reported 47% for RhoVR 1 and 44% for sRhoVR 1.42,43 However, given the improved cellular brightness, phosRhoVR 1 provides a nearly 2-fold increase in signal-to-noise for detecting membrane potential changes. PhosRhoVR 1 shows retention on the plasma membrane similar to RhoVR 1 (Fig. S12†). Both RhoVR 1 and phosRhoVR 1 are well-retained on the plasma membrane compared to di-4-ANEPPS, which shows some internalization after 30 minutes (Fig. S12†).
Additionally, 3-phosphonate functionality is readily incorporated into voltage sensing scaffolds. Fluorescent voltage reporters with a 3-phosphono group possess excellent voltage sensitivity, 2× improved cellular brightness, and can be synthesized in hundreds of milligram quantities. Future work will expand 3-phosphonate substitution to the entire family of xanthene fluorophores, including rhodols and other 10′ heteroatom substitutions.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d3sc02590j |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2023 |