Vinyl Phosphonates as Photopharmacological Agents: Laser‐Induced Cis‐Trans Isomerization and Butyrylcholinesterase Activity

Author:

Bikbaeva Gulia1,Egorova Anastasia23,Sonin Nikolai3,Pilip Anna2,Kolesnikov Ilya1,Pankin Dmitrii1,Boroznjak Roman4,Manshina Alina1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. St. Petersburg State University 7–9 Universitetskaya Embankment St. Petersburg 199034 Russia

2. St. Petersburg Federal Research Center of the Russian Academy of Sciences (SPC RAS) Scientific Research Centre for Ecological Safety of the Russian Academy of Sciences Corpusnaya 18 St. Petersburg 197110 Russia

3. St. Petersburg State Technological Institute (Technical University) 26, Moskovski ave. St. Petersburg 190013 Russia

4. Department of Materials and Environmental Technology Tallinn University of Technology Ehitajate tee 5 19086 Tallinn Estonia

Abstract

AbstractPhotoswitchable molecules are highly requested compounds in various fields and, in particular, biomedicine. The urgent modern task of photopharmacology (an emerging approach in medicine) is the design of molecules that have both photoswitchable and bioactive properties. In this study, we present vinyl phosphonates – diene compounds with ethyl and isopropyl substituents on the phosphonate group. Both compounds demonstrated laser‐induced cistrans isomerization via a C=C bond after irradiation at 266 nm. The photoisomerization quantum yield was 17 % and 20 % for compounds with ethyl and isopropyl groups, respectively. The main advantage of the presented vinyl phosphonates is their bioactivity, unlike other photoswitchable molecules. Rather efficient butyrylcholinesterase inhibition by both presented compounds was demonstrated by IPC‐Micro analysis. The notable butyrylcholinesterase inhibition increase by 5 and 9 times was found for the vinyl phosphonates after laser irradiation. Such a sizeable difference in inhibition values for different isomeric states is a critical factor, which opens the way toward promising applications of vinyl phosphonates as photopharmacological agents.

Funder

Russian Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Organic Chemistry,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry,Analytical Chemistry

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