4.8 Review

Bioinspired Applications of Porphyrin Derivatives

Journal

ACCOUNTS OF CHEMICAL RESEARCH
Volume 54, Issue 9, Pages 2249-2260

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.accounts.1c00114

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Mid-Career Researcher Program - National Research Foundation (NRF) of Korea [2020R1A2C3004520]
  2. Postdoc Researcher Supporting Program - Yonsei University [2020-12-0026]
  3. National Research Foundation of Korea [2020R1A2C3004520] Funding Source: Korea Institute of Science & Technology Information (KISTI), National Science & Technology Information Service (NTIS)

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Porphyrin derivatives play important roles in biological processes such as photosynthesis, oxygen transport, and catalysis, exhibiting versatile functionality through noncovalent interactions with proteins. They are excellent host compounds and key components in functional supramolecular assemblies due to their symmetrical molecular architecture and excellent photophysical properties. Their applications in bioactive functional materials and biomedical nanodevice fabrication are promising despite limitations such as aggregation in aqueous media.
CONSPECTUS: Porphyrin derivatives are ubiquitous in nature and have important biological roles, such as in light harvesting, oxygen transport, and catalysis. Owing to their intrinsic p-conjugated structure, porphyrin derivatives exhibit characteristic photophysical and electrochemical properties. In biological systems, porphyrin derivatives are associated with various protein molecules through noncovalent interactions. For example, hemoglobin, which is responsible for oxygen transport in most vertebrates, consists of four subunits of a globular protein with an iron porphyrin derivative prosthetic group. Furthermore, noncovalently arranged porphyrin derivatives are the fundamental chromophores in light-harvesting systems for photosynthesis in plants and algae. These biologically important roles originate from the functional versatility of porphyrin derivatives. Specifically, porphyrins are excellent host compounds, forming coordination complexes with various metal ions that adds functionality to the porphyrin unit, such as redox activity and additional ligand binding at the central metal ion. In addition, porphyrins are useful building blocks for functional supramolecular assemblies because of their flat and symmetrical molecular architectures, and their excellent photophysical properties are typically utilized for the fabrication of bioactive functional materials. In this Account, we summarize our endeavors over the past decade to develop functional materials based on porphyrin derivatives using bioinspired approaches. In the first section, we discuss several synthetic receptors that act as artificial allosteric host systems and can be used for the selective detection of various chemicals, such as cyanide, chloride, and amino acids. In the second section, we introduce multiporphyrin arrays as mimics of natural light-harvesting complexes. The active control of energy transfer processes by additional guest binding and the fabrication of organic photovoltaic devices using porphyrin derivatives are also introduced. In the third section, we introduce several types of porphyrin-based supramolecular assemblies. Through noncovalent interactions such as metal-ligand interaction, hydrogen bonding, and pi-pi interaction, porphyrin derivatives were constructed as supramolecular polymers with formation of fiber or toroidal assembly. In the last section, the application of porphyrin derivatives for biomedical nanodevice fabrication is introduced. Even though porphyrins were good candidates as photosensitizers for photodynamic therapy, they have limitations for biomedical application owing to aggregation in aqueous media. We suggested ionic dendrimer porphyrins and they showed excellent photodynamic therapy (PDT) efficacy.

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