Journal of Physical Chemistry A, Vol.110, No.38, 11025-11033, 2006
Effect of hydroxylic solvent on the fluorescence behavior of some bioactive 9-oxo-imidazo[1,2-a]purine derivatives
The spectral and photophysical behavior of four fluorescent 9-oxo-imidazo[1,2-a] purine derivatives containing pyridyl, pyridylphenyl, phenyl, and biphenylyl substituents at the C(6) position of the tricyclic skeleton is described. The studies were performed in several aprotic and protic organic solvents using absorption spectroscopy as well as steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy. The results are also presented of TDDFT calculations on singlet-singlet excitation energies and oscillator strengths for two models of 9-oxo-imidazo[1,2-a] purine, with phenyl or pyridyl substituents, both in the gas phase and in methanol solution. While the derivatives with aryl substituents did not show any significant dependence of their static and dynamic fluorescence properties on the nature of the solvent, the compounds containing a pyridine residue exhibited a remarkable reduction of their fluorescence quantum yields and lifetimes in the alcoholic solutions. The solute-solvent hydrogen-bonding interaction in the first excited singlet state is responsible for the fast radiationless decay rates determined for pyridyl- and pyridylphenyl-substituted compounds in protic solvents. The results of experimental and theoretical studies show that the hydrogen of the alcohols' hydroxyl group and the nitrogen atom of the pyridine moiety are involved in the interaction. The fluorescence-quenching experiments performed for the pyridyl-substituted 9-oxo-imidazo[1,2-a] purine derivative using trifluoroethanol, methanol, and butanol as quenchers revealed that the quenching efficiencies, expressed by the Stern-Volmer quenching constants, correlate with the H-bond donating abilities of the alcohols. The quenching is a dynamic process, and the H-bonded complex formed is nonfluorescent. The experimentally determined and the calculated values of the dipole moment change associated with the electronic excitation indicate that the excited S-1 states of all of the molecules studied in this work have an intramolecular charge-transfer character and that electronic charge is transferred to the C(6) substituent upon excitation. Thus, the ability of the pyridyl substituent nitrogen atom to act as an H-bond acceptor in the excited S-1 state is enhanced. The 6-pyridyl-9-oxo-imidazo[1,2-a] purine presents a novel fluorophore, which, besides its medical applications, may be useful as a sensor of hydroxyl groups in microorganized systems.