Solvent-Free Synthesis and Fluorescence of a Thiol-Reactive Sensor for Undergraduate Organic Laboratories

J Chem Educ. 2013 Dec 10;90(12):10.1021/ed400445j. doi: 10.1021/ed400445j.

Abstract

A green organic laboratory experiment was developed in which students synthesize a sensor for thiols using a microscale, solventless Diels-Alder reaction at room temperature or 37 °C. The molecular probe is easily purified by column chromatography in a Pasteur pipet and characterized by thin-layer chromatography and NMR spectroscopy. The thiol-reactive sensor becomes intensely fluorescent upon exposure to thiols from N-acetylcysteine, bovine serum albumin, or human hair (pretreated with a reducing agent to reveal cysteine thiols in α-keratin). This fluorescence is observable even with micrograms of probe.

Keywords: NMR Spectroscopy; fluorescence spectroscopy; green chemistry; hands-on learning; laboratory instruction; microscale lab; organic chemistry; organosulfur compounds; second-year undergraduate; synthesis.