The class of diamino-naphthalene exhibits antioxidant properties, which are partly related to the relative positions of the two amino groups. This study demonstrates how the reactivity of one of these compounds, 1,5-diamino-naphthalene (DAN), can be adjusted by introducing a single amide bond through a simple thermal coupling with l-pyroglutamic acid (PyroGlu). The solventless thermal reaction between PyroGlu and DAN at 160 degrees C yielded a new mono-pyroglutanilide compound (PyroDAN) that was characterized using various analytical techniques, including a thermal and infrared analysis, HRMS (ESI), and one- (1D) and two-dimensional (2D) NMR. The optical properties were investigated using UV-Vis and fluorescence spectroscopy. Additionally, two chemical standard assays were used to measure both the antioxidant and pro-oxidant properties of PyroDAN. The molecule has shown nearly negligible pro-oxidant activity, while a mild antioxidant activity is still retained. These findings indicate that the transformation of DAN into a mono-pyroglutanilide derivative breaks the original molecular symmetry and effectively modifies the electronic distribution of the aromatic system, suppressing the oxidant properties while keeping a mild antioxidant activity. Furthermore, the tuneable fluorescent properties of PyroDAN-the mild antioxidant activity and the inhibition of the cytologically harmful pro-oxidant properties-suggest promising applications in bioimaging and other biological fields.
Tuning the Activity of 1,5-Diamino-naphthalene Through an Asymmetric Mono-Amidation with Pyroglutamic Acid / Carboni, D.; Cadeddu, M.; Olia, F.; Fiori, F.; Anedda, R.; Carraro, M.; Malfatti, L.; Innocenzi, P.. - In: MOLECULES. - ISSN 1420-3049. - 30:8(2025). [10.3390/molecules30081802]
Tuning the Activity of 1,5-Diamino-naphthalene Through an Asymmetric Mono-Amidation with Pyroglutamic Acid
Carboni D.
Supervision
;Olia F.Formal Analysis
;Carraro M.Formal Analysis
;Malfatti L.Writing – Review & Editing
;Innocenzi P.Funding Acquisition
2025-01-01
Abstract
The class of diamino-naphthalene exhibits antioxidant properties, which are partly related to the relative positions of the two amino groups. This study demonstrates how the reactivity of one of these compounds, 1,5-diamino-naphthalene (DAN), can be adjusted by introducing a single amide bond through a simple thermal coupling with l-pyroglutamic acid (PyroGlu). The solventless thermal reaction between PyroGlu and DAN at 160 degrees C yielded a new mono-pyroglutanilide compound (PyroDAN) that was characterized using various analytical techniques, including a thermal and infrared analysis, HRMS (ESI), and one- (1D) and two-dimensional (2D) NMR. The optical properties were investigated using UV-Vis and fluorescence spectroscopy. Additionally, two chemical standard assays were used to measure both the antioxidant and pro-oxidant properties of PyroDAN. The molecule has shown nearly negligible pro-oxidant activity, while a mild antioxidant activity is still retained. These findings indicate that the transformation of DAN into a mono-pyroglutanilide derivative breaks the original molecular symmetry and effectively modifies the electronic distribution of the aromatic system, suppressing the oxidant properties while keeping a mild antioxidant activity. Furthermore, the tuneable fluorescent properties of PyroDAN-the mild antioxidant activity and the inhibition of the cytologically harmful pro-oxidant properties-suggest promising applications in bioimaging and other biological fields.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


