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Free, publicly-accessible full text available December 16, 2025
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The elusive PcFe(DABCO)2(Pc = phthalocyaninato(2-) ligand; DABCO = 1,4-diazabicyclo[2.2.2]octane) complex was prepared and characterized by UV-Vis, MCD,1H NMR, and Mössbauer spectroscopies. The X-ray crystal structure of this complex indicates the longest Fe-N(DABCO) bond distance among all known PcFeL2complexes with nitrogen donors as the axial ligands. The target compound is only stable in the presence of large access of the axial ligand and rapidly converts into the (PcFe)2O [Formula: see text]-oxo dimer even at a modest temperature. The electronic structure of the PcFe(DABCO)2complex was elucidated by DFT and TDDFT methods. The DFT calculations predicted a very small singlet-triplet gap in this compound. The femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy is indicative of extremely fast ([Formula: see text]200 fs) deactivation of the first excited state in PcFe(DABCO)2with a lack of formation of the long-lived low-energy triplet state.more » « less
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The electronic communication between two ferrocene groups in the electron-deficient expanded aza-BODIPY analogue of zinc manitoba-dipyrromethene (MB-DIPY) was probed by spectroscopic, electrochemical, spectroelectrochemical, and theoretical methods. The excited-state dynamics involved sub- ps formation of the charge-separated state in the organometallic zinc MB-DIPYs, followed by recovery of the ground state via charge recombination in 12 ps. The excited-state behavior was contrasted with that observed in the parent complex that lacked the ferrocene electron donors and has a much longer excited-state lifetime (670 ps for the singlet state). Much longer decay times observed for the parent complex without ferrocene confirm that the main quenching mechanism in the ferrocene-containing 4 is reflective of the ultrafast ferrocene-to-MB-DIPY core charge transfer (CTmore » « less
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null (Ed.)Photoactivatable protecting groups (PPGs) are useful for a broad range of applications ranging from biology to materials science. In chemical biology, induction of biological processes via photoactivation is a powerful strategy for achieving spatiotemporal control. The importance of cysteine, glutathione, and other bioactive thiols in regulating protein structure/activity and cell redox homeostasis makes modulation of thiol activity particularly useful. One major objective for enhancing the utility of photoactivatable protecting groups (PPGs) in living systems is creating PPGs with longer wavelength absorption maxima and efficient two-photon (TP) absorption. Toward these objectives, we developed a carboxyl- and dimethylamine-functionalized nitrodibenzofuran PPG scaffold (cDMA-NDBF) for thiol photoactivation, which has a bathochromic shift in the one-photon absorption maximum from λ max = 315 nm with the unfunctionalized NDBF scaffold to λ max = 445 nm. While cDMA-NDBF-protected thiols are stable in the presence of UV irradiation, they undergo efficient broad-spectrum TP photolysis at wavelengths as long as 900 nm. To demonstrate the wavelength orthogonality of cDMA-NDBF and NDBF photolysis in a biological setting, caged farnesyltransferase enzyme inhibitors (FTI) were prepared and selectively photoactivated in live cells using 850–900 nm TP light for cDMA-NDBF-FTI and 300 nm UV light for NDBF-FTI. These experiments represent the first demonstration of thiol photoactivation at wavelengths above 800 nm. Consequently, cDMA-NDBF-caged thiols should have broad applicability in a wide range of experiments in chemical biology and materials science.more » « less
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