A Preparative and Spectroscopic Study of Fluorophores for Zinc(II) Detection
Marc C. Kimber, Indumathy B. Mahadevan,
Stephen F. Lincoln, A. David Ward and W. Henry Betts
Australian Journal of Chemistry
54(1) 43 - 49
Published: 2001
Abstract
Zinc(II) specific fluorophores are of substantial importance in the study of intracellular Zn 2+ . Two such widely used fluorophores are 2-methyl-8-(4-toluenesulfonamido)-6-quinolyloxyacetic acid, Zinquin (1), and its ethyl ester, Zinquin ester (2), which fluoresce strongly when bound by Zn 2+ . To gain insight into the factors affecting the fluorescence of such fluorophores the closely related 4-methyl-N-(6-methoxy-2-methyl-8-quinolyl)-benzenesulfonamide (3), and nine analogues (4–12), substituted at sulfur by nine different substituents have been prepared and their fluorescing characteristics and those of their Zn 2+ complexes have been examined. The nine substituents are: 2,2,2-trifluoroethyl (4), 4-methoxyphenyl (5), 4-acetamidophenyl (6), 4-bromophenyl (7), 4-nitrophenyl (8), 3-trifluoromethylphenyl (9), naphth-1-yl (10), naphth-2-yl (11) and 5-dimethylaminonaphth-1-yl (12). Under neutral conditions in 75/25% v/v ethanol/water solutions, (3)–(7) and (9)–(11) fluoresce weakly in the free state, (8) does not fluoresce and (12) fluoresces strongly. Ultraviolet (UV)-visible spectroscopy shows that (3)–(12) complex to Zn 2+ , but unlike the remainder, the complexes of (8) and (12) do not fluoresce, with those possessing electron-withdrawing substituents, (4) and (9), being the most fluorescent. On this basis ethyl-2-(2-methyl-quinolyloxy-8-(2,2,2-trifluoroethylsulfonamido))acetate (19) was prepared and its Zn 2+ complex was found to be substantially more fluorescent than that of (2).https://doi.org/10.1071/CH00134
© CSIRO 2001