Issue 23, 2006

Pyrene-sensitized electron transport across vesicle bilayers: dependence of transport efficiency on pyrene substituents

Abstract

Endoergic electron transport across vesicle bilayers from ascorbate (Asc) in the inner waterpool to methylviologen (MV2+) in the outer aqueous solution was driven by the irradiation of pyrene derivatives embedded in the vesicle bilayers. The initial rate of MV2+ reduction is dependent on the substituent group of the pyrenyl ring; a hydrophilic functional group linked with the pyrenyl ring by a short methylene chain acts as a sensitizer for the electron transport. Mechanistic studies using (1-pyrenyl)alkanoic acids (1a–c) as sensitizers suggest that the electron transport is mainly initiated by the reductive quenching of the singlet excited state of the pyrene by Asc and proceeds by a mechanism involving electron exchange between the pyrenes located at the inner and outer interface across the vesicle bilayer. We designed and synthesized novel unsymmetrically substituted pyrenes having both a hydrophilic group linked by a short methylene chain and a hydrophobic long alkyl group (5a–c), which acted as excellent sensitizers for the electron transport across vesicle bilayers.

Graphical abstract: Pyrene-sensitized electron transport across vesicle bilayers: dependence of transport efficiency on pyrene substituents

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
04 Jul 2006
Accepted
06 Oct 2006
First published
24 Oct 2006

Org. Biomol. Chem., 2006,4, 4336-4344

Pyrene-sensitized electron transport across vesicle bilayers: dependence of transport efficiency on pyrene substituents

T. Mizushima, A. Yoshida, A. Harada, Y. Yoneda, T. Minatani and S. Murata, Org. Biomol. Chem., 2006, 4, 4336 DOI: 10.1039/B609507K

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