Related Tables

Carboxylic acids can be converted to esters, amides, acyl hydrazides or hydroxamic acids, all of which are discussed in this section. Alternatively, the half-protected tert-butyloxycarbonyl (t-BOC) propylenediamine derivative is useful for converting organic solvent–soluble carboxylic acids into aliphatic amines. Following coupling of the half-protected aliphatic diamine to an activated carboxylic acid, the t-BOC group can be quantitatively removed with trifluoroacetic acid (Figure 3.4.1). The resultant aliphatic amine can then be modified with any of the amine-reactive reagents described in Fluorophores and Their Amine-Reactive Derivatives—Chapter 1 or coupled to solid-phase matrices for affinity chromatography.

Conversion of a carboxylic acid
Figure 3.4.1 Conversion of a carboxylic acid group into an aliphatic amine. The activated carboxylic acid is derivatized with a half-protected aliphatic diamine (mono-N-(t-BOC)-propylenediamine), usually in an organic solvent, followed by removal of the t-BOC–protecting group with trifluoroacetic acid.

Coupling Hydrazines, Hydroxylamines and Amines to Carboxylic Acids

Modification in Aqueous Solutions

The carboxylic acids of water-soluble biopolymers such as proteins can be coupled to hydrazines, hydroxylamines and amines (Molecular Probes hydrazine, hydroxylamine and amine derivatives—Table 3.2) in aqueous solution using water-soluble carbodiimides such as 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide (EDAC, E2247). Including N-hydroxysulfosuccinimide in the reaction mixture has been shown to improve the coupling efficiency of EDAC-mediated protein–carboxylic acid conjugations ref (Figure 3.4.2). To reduce intra- and inter-protein coupling to lysine residues,ref which is a common side reaction, carbodiimide-mediated coupling should be performed in a concentrated protein solution at a low pH, using a large excess of the nucleophile. EDAC-mediated coupling has been used to functionalize Qdot 605 ITK carboxyl quantum dots (Q21301MP, Qdot Nanocrystals—Section 6.6) with the GABA receptor agonist muscimol.ref EDAC has been shown to be impermeable to membranes of live cells, which permits its use to distinguish between cytoplasmic and lumenal sites of reaction.ref

Fluoresceinyl glycine amide (5-(aminoacetamido)fluorescein, A1363) and various hydrazines and hydroxylamines may be the best probes for this application because they are more likely to remain reactive at a lower pH than are aliphatic amines such as the cadaverines.ref Fluoresceinyl glycine amide has been coupled to the carboxylic acid of a cyclosporin derivative by EDAC.ref

ANTS (8-aminonaphthalene-1,3,6-trisulfonic acid, A350; Reagents for Modifying Aldehydes and Ketones—Section 3.3) has a high ionic charge, which permits electrophoretic separation of its products with complex oligosaccharides.ref Several of the fluorescent hydrazine and hydroxylamine derivatives described in Reagents for Modifying Aldehydes and Ketones—Section 3.3 should have similar utility for carbodiimide-mediated derivatization of carboxylic acids.

Stabilization of an unstable O-acylisourea
Figure 3.4.2 Stabilization of an unstable O-acylisourea intermediate by N-hydroxysuccinimide in a carbodiimide-mediated (EDAC) modification of a carboxylic acid with a primary amine.

Modification in Organic Solvents

Peptide synthesis research has led to the development of numerous methods for coupling carboxylic acids to amines in organic solution. One such method involves the conversion of carboxylic acids to succinimidyl esters or mixed anhydrides. Dicyclohexylcarbodiimide and diisopropylcarbodiimide are widely used to promote amide formation in organic solution. Another recommended derivatization method for coupling organic solvent–soluble carboxylic acids, including peptides, to aliphatic amines without racemization is the combination of 2,2'-dipyridyldisulfide and triphenylphosphine.ref Unlike fluorescent aliphatic amines, fluorescent aromatic amines such as those derived from 7-amino-4-methylcoumarin (A191) and 2-aminoacridone (A6289, Reagents for Modifying Aldehydes and Ketones—Section 3.3) exhibit a shift in their absorption and emission (if any) to much shorter wavelengths upon forming carboxamides. This property makes these aromatic amines preferred reagents for preparing peptidase substrates (Detecting Peptidases and Proteases—Section 10.4). Aromatic amines can generally be coupled to acid halides and anhydrides, with organic solvents usually required for efficient reaction.

Hydrazine, Hydroxylamine and Aliphatic Amine Derivatives

We provide a wide selection of carboxylic acid–reactive reagents (Molecular Probes hydrazine, hydroxylamine and amine derivatives—Table 3.2), including several different Dapoxyl, Alexa Fluor, BODIPY, fluorescein, Oregon Green, rhodamine, Texas Red and QSY Hydrazine Derivatives, Hydroxylamine Derivatives and Amine Derivatives, all of which are particularly useful for synthesizing drug analogs and as probes for fluorescence polarization immunoassays ref (Fluorescence Polarization (FP)—Note 1.4). These probes all require a coupling agent such as a carbodiimide to react with carboxylic acids; they do not spontaneously react with carboxylic acids in solution. They do, however, react spontaneously with the common amine-reactive functional groups described in Introduction to Amine Modification—Section 1.1, including succinimidyl esters and isothiocyanates. Some of the more important probes and their applications include:

Enzyme-Catalyzed Transamidation

A transglutaminase-catalyzed transamidation reaction of glutamine residues in some proteins and peptides enables their selective modification by amine-containing probes ref (Figure 3.4.3). This unique method for selective protein modification requires formation of a complex consisting of the glutamine residue, the aliphatic amine probe and the enzyme. It has been found that a short aliphatic spacer in the amine probe enhances the reaction. The cadaverine (–NH(CH2)5NH–) spacer is usually optimal. Although dansyl cadaverine has been probably the most widely used reagent,ref Alexa Fluor cadaverines ref (A30675, A30676, A30677, A30678, A30679), Oregon Green 488 cadaverine (O10465), fluorescein cadaverine ref (A10466), tetramethylrhodamine cadaverine ref (A1318), Texas Red cadaverine (T2425) and BODIPY TR cadaverine (D6251) are among the most fluorescent transglutaminase substrates available. The intrinsic transglutaminase activity in sea urchin eggs has been used to covalently incorporate dansyl cadaverine during embryonic development.ref Two biotin cadaverines (A1594, B1596; Biotinylation and Haptenylation Reagents—Section 4.2) are also available for transglutaminase-mediated reactions.ref Amine-terminated peptides and fluorescent and biotin hydrazides, including Cascade Blue hydrazide, have been successfully incorporated into protein fragments by transamidation during enzyme-catalyzed proteolysis.ref

Transamidation of cell-surface glutamine residues by the combination of a transglutaminase enzyme and a fluorescent or biotinylated aliphatic amine can form stable amides.ref Impermeability of the enzyme restricts this reaction to a limited number of proteins on the cell surface. This technique was used to selectively label erythrocyte band 3 protein with dansyl cadaverine and proteins of the extracellular matrix with fluorescein cadaverine ref (A10466). Following protease treatment, the dansylated peptides were isolated using an anti-dansyl affinity column.ref

Transglutaminase-mediated labeling
Figure 3.4.3 Transglutaminase-mediated labeling of a protein using dansyl cadaverine.

Esterification of Carboxylic Acids with Fluorescent Diazoalkanes

Biologically important molecules, especially the nonchromophoric fatty acids, bile acids and prostaglandins, are typically esterified by carboxylic acid–reactive reagents in organic solvents. Esterification of carboxylic acids in aqueous solution is usually not possible, and esters tend to be unstable in water. Fluorescent derivatization reagents for biomedical chromatography have been extensively discussed in reviews.ref

HPLC derivatization reagents for carboxylic acids include two fluorescent analogs of the common esterification reagent diazomethane. Diazoalkanes react without the addition of catalysts and may be useful for direct carboxylic acid modification of proteins and synthetic polymers. Fluorescent diazoalkanes also react with phosphates ref and potentially with lipid-associated carboxylic acids in membrane-bound proteins or with free fatty acids.

The fluorescent diazomethyl derivative 9-anthryldiazomethane (ADAM) has been commonly used to derivatize biomolecules. Unfortunately, ADAM is not very stable and may decompose during storage. 1-Pyrenyldiazomethane ref (PDAM, P1405) is recommended as a replacement for ADAM because it has much better chemical stability. Moreover, the detection limit for PDAM conjugates is reported to be about 20–30 femtomoles, which is five times better than reported for detection of ADAM conjugates.ref In addition, fatty acids derivatized with these reagents have been used to measure phospholipase A2 activity ref (Probes for Lipid Metabolism and Signaling—Section 17.4). It has been reported that photolysis of pyrenemethyl esters liberates the free carboxylic acid,ref making PDAM a potential protecting group for carboxylic acids.

Fluorescent Alkyl Halides

The low nucleophilicity of carboxylic acids requires that they be converted to anions (typically cesium or quaternary ammonium are used as counterions) before they can be esterified with alkyl halides in organic solvents. Conjugates of 6-bromoacetyl-2-dimethylaminonaphthalene (badan, B6057) have a high Stokes shift, as well as spectral properties that are very sensitive to their environment. 5-(Bromomethyl)fluorescein and BODIPY 493/503 methyl bromide have the strongest absorptivity and fluorescence of the currently available carboxylic acid–derivatization reagents.ref An analytical method for estimating the degree of EDAC crosslinking of collagen has been developed based on derivatization of residual carboxyl groups by 5-bromomethylfluorescein.ref

All of the alkyl halides in this section also react with thiol groups, including those in proteins.ref Although more commonly used as thiol-reactive reagents, the monobromobimanes (M1378, M20381; Thiol-Reactive Probes Excited with Ultraviolet Light—Section 2.3) have been reported to react with carboxylic acids in organic solvents.ref The coumarin iodoacetamide DCIA (Thiol-Reactive Probes Excited with Ultraviolet Light—Section 2.3) has also been used to derivatize carboxylic acids;ref other iodoacetamides described in Thiol-Reactive Probes—Chapter 2 will probably react similarly.

Fluorescent Trifluoromethanesulfonate

2-(2,3-Naphthalimino)ethyl trifluoromethanesulfonate reacts rapidly with the anions of carboxylic acids in acetonitrile to give adducts that are reported to be detectable by absorption at 259 nm down to 100 femtomoles and by fluorescence at 394 nm down to 4 femtomoles.ref This naphthalimide sulfonate ester will likely react with other nucleophiles too, including thiols, amines, phenols (e.g., tyrosine) and probably histidine. 2-(2,3-Naphthalimino)ethyl trifluoromethanesulfonate has been used for the sensitive reverse-phase HPLC detection of eicosanoids in brain tissue.ref

4-Sulfo-2,3,5,6-Tetrafluorophenol (STP) and N-Hydroxysulfosuccinimide (NHSS)

4-Sulfo-2,3,5,6-tetrafluorophenol (STP) and N-hydroxysulfosuccinimide (NHSS) can be used to prepare water-soluble activated esters from various carboxylic acids (Figure 3.4.4). Coupling typically involves a carbodiimide such as EDAC (E2247) and is performed in an organic solvent. We have found that the resulting STP esters are much easier to purify and more stable than activated esters prepared from N-hydroxysulfosuccinimide.ref NHSS esters of biotin and other derivatives considerably increase the aqueous solubility of the reagents.ref We offer a variety of amine-reactive STP esters, which are discussed in Fluorophores and Their Amine-Reactive Derivatives—Chapter 1.

4-Sulfo-2,3,5,6-tetrafluorophenol
Figure 3.4.4 4-Sulfo-2,3,5,6-tetrafluorophenol (STP) can be used to prepare water-soluble activated esters from various carboxylic acids.

Data Table

For a detailed explanation of column headings, see Definitions of Data Table Contents

Cat #MWStorageSolubleAbsECEmSolventNotes
EDANS288.30LpH >10, DMF3355900493pH 8 
A191
7-amino-4-methylcoumarin
175.19LDMF, DMSO35118,000430MeOH1
A1318
tetramethylrhodamine cadaverine
514.62F,D,LDMF, EtOH54478,000571MeOH 
lucifer yellow ethylenediamine491.57LH2O42512,000532H2O 
lucifer yellow cadaverine533.65LH2O42611,000531H2O 
4'-(aminoethyl)fluorescein397.81LpH >6, DMF49280,000516pH 92
A1353
5-(aminomethyl)fluorescein
397.81LpH >6, DMF49268,000516pH 92
A1363
fluoresceinyl glycine amide
404.38LpH >6, DMF49180,000515pH 92
ADAM218.26FF,D,LDMF, MeCN3646100411MeOH 
A10466
fluorescein cadaverine
653.38D,LpH >6, DMF49382,000517pH 92
Alexa Fluor 350 cadaverine397.45F,D,LH2O35320,000437MeOH 
A30675
Alexa Fluor 405 cadaverine
666.58F,D,LH2O39929,000422H2O3
A30676
Alexa Fluor 488 cadaverine
640.61F,D,LH2O49373,000516pH 74, 5
A30677
Alexa Fluor 555 cadaverine
~950F,D,LH2O555155,000572MeOH 
A30678
Alexa Fluor 594 cadaverine
806.94F,D,LH2O588105,000612pH 7 
A30679
Alexa Fluor 647 cadaverine
~1000F,D,LH2O651245,000672MeOH 
Alexa Fluor 568 cadaverine812.95F,D,LH2O57893,000602pH 7 
5-(bromomethyl)fluorescein425.23F,D,LpH >6, DMF49281,000515pH 9 
BODiPY 493/503 methyl bromide341.00F,D,LDMSO, MeCN53362,000561CHCl3 
B6057
badan
292.17F,LDMF, MeCN38721,000520MeOH 
bimane amine207.23F,D,LDMSO3756000458MeOH 
Cascade Blue ethylenediamine624.49LH2O39930,000423H2O3
D112
dansyl ethylenediamine
293.38LEtOH, DMF3354600526MeOH 
dansyl cadaverine335.46LEtOH, DMF3354600518MeOH 
D2390
BODIPY FL EDA
370.64F,D,LDMSO, MeCN50376,000510MeOH6
D6251
BODIPY TR cadaverine
544.85F,D,LDMSO, MeCN58864,000616MeOH6
Dapoxyl (2-aminoethyl)sulfonamide386.47LDMF, DMSO37323,000571MeOH7
E2247
EDAC
191.70F,DH2O<300 none  
NHSS217.13DH2O<300 none  
L2424
Lissamine rhodamine B ethylenediamine
600.75LDMF, DMSO561122,000581MeOH 
mono-N-(t-BOC)-propylenediamine174.24D,ADMF, MeCN<300 none  
2-(2,3-naphthalimino)ethyl triflluoromethanesulfonate373.30FF,DD,LDMF, CHCl326059,000395MeOH 
O10465
Oregon Green 488 cadaverine
496.47F,D,LpH >6, DMF49475,000521pH 98
P1405
PDAM
242.28FF,LDMF, MeCN34041,000375MeOH 
QSY 7 amine814.87LDMSO56092,000noneMeOH 
STP268.11DH2O<300 none  
T2425
Texas Red C5
690.87LDMF59185,000612pH 9 
  1. A191 in aqueous solution (pH 7.0): Abs = 342 nm (EC = 16,000 cm-1M-1), Em = 441 nm.
  2. Absorption and fluorescence of fluorescein derivatives are pH dependent. Extinction coefficients and fluorescence quantum yields decrease markedly at pH <7.
  3. The Alexa Fluor 405 and Cascade Blue dyes have a second absorption peak at about 376 nm with EC ~80% of the 395–400 nm peak.
  4. The fluorescence lifetime (τ) of the Alexa Fluor 488 dye in pH 7.4 buffer at 20°C is 4.1 nanoseconds. Data provided by the SPEX Fluorescence Group, Horiba Jobin Yvon Inc.
  5. Abs and Em of the Alexa Fluor 488 dye are red-shifted by as much as 16 nm and 25 nm respectively on microarrays relative to aqueous solution values. The magnitude of the spectral shift depends on the array substrate material.ref
  6. The absorption and fluorescence spectra of BODIPY derivatives are relatively insensitive to the solvent.
  7. Fluorescence emission spectrum shifts to shorter wavelengths in nonpolar solvents.8. Absorption and fluorescence of Oregon Green 488 derivatives are pH dependent only in moderately acidic solutions (pH <5).

For Research Use Only. Not for use in diagnostic procedures.