4.8 Article

Host-[2] rotaxanes as cellular transport agents

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 125, Issue 27, Pages 8290-8301

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ja034918c

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Host-[2)rotaxanes, containing a diarginine-derivatized dibenzo-24-crown-8 (DB24C8) ether as the ring and a cyclophane pocket or an aromatic cleft as one blocking group, are cell transport agents. These hosts strongly associate with a variety of amino acids, dipeptides, and fluorophores in water (1 mM phosphate buffer, pH 7.0), DMSO, and a 75/25 (v/v) buffer to DMSO solution. All peptidic guests in all solvent systems have association constants (K-A's) in the range of 1 x 10(4) to 5 x 104 M-1, whereas the K-A range for the fluorophores is 1 x 10(4) to 9 x 10(5) m(-1). Association constants for the cyclophane itself, cyclophane 3, are smaller. These values are in the 1 x 10(3) to 5 x 10(3) m(-1) range, which shows that the rotaxane architecture is advantageous for guest binding. Cyclophane-[2]rotaxane 1 efficiently transports fluorescein and a fluorescein-protein kinase C (PKC) inhibitor into eukaryotic COS-7 cells, including the nucleus. Interestingly, cleft-[2)rotaxane 2 does not transport fluorescein as efficiently, even though the results from the fluorescence assays show that both [2]rotaxanes bind fluorescein with the same ability.

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