Projekty

1. Tetrafluoroethyl and tetrafluoroethylene group transfer

Starting from dibromotetrafluoroethane we have synthesized a variety of nucleophilic and radical sulfur-containing compounds, which are now under investigation as reagents for tetrafluoroethyl and tetrafluoroethylene group transfer (European Journal of Organic Chemistry 4528-4531, 2011; Synlett 1187-1190, 2012; Journal of Fluorine Chemistry 156: 307-313, 2013; Journal of Fluorine Chemistry 171: 162-168, 2015; Chemistry - A European Journal 2015).

Magnesiation of tetrafluoroethyl-containing bromides with Turbo Grignard reagents led to the formation of organomagnesium compounds, which were stable at low temperature and reacted with various electrophiles to afford novel functionalized tetrafluoroethylene-containing products (Organic Letters 18: 5844-5847, 2016).



In collaboration with the group of Prof. Togni (ETH, Zurich) a series of new hypervalent iodine reagents was prepared and used for electrophilic CF2CF2 transfer (Chemistry - A European Journal 22: 417-424, 2016).

The exceptionally good reactivity and selectivity of these hypervalent iodine reagents toward thiols prompted us to investigate conjugation to biological thiols. A secondary amine platform reagent was designed, converted to amide, sulfonamide or termiary amine and in collaboration with Prof. Hilvert (ETH Zurich) studied for bioconjugation of a retroaldolase enzyme (Chemistry - A European Journal 23: 6490-6494, 2017). Our reagents have several advantages over existing commercial thiol conjugation reagents: modular synthesis with a variety of functional groups attached in the last step (fluorophore, biotin, PEG, reactive handle), exceptional selectivity for thiols, fast reaction rates and high stability of the conjugate.

 
 

2. The chemistry of polyfluorinated azides

In 2017, we reported a breakthrough in azide chemistry. CF3N3 and longer carbon chain analogues were prepared from silanes or other carbanion precursors, which opened a door to study properties and reactivity of these compounds. They are no longer regarded as chemical curiosities. Furthermore, they were shown to be stable (not explosive) and readily undergo copper(I)-catalyzed azide-alkyne cycyloaddition (CuAAC) to form novel N-perfluoroalkyl triazoles (Angewandte Chemie International Edition 56: 346-349, 2017). Other tetrafluoroethylene and tetrafluoroethyl azides and triazoles were reported (Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry 15: 4962-4965, 2017).

Transannulation reaction of N-(per)fluoroalkyl triazoles provided novel N-(per)fluoroalkyl pyrroles and imidazoles (Chemical Communications 54: 3258-3261, 2018).

 
 

3. New methodologies for the preparation of (pentafluorosulfanyl)benzenes

Organic compounds with pentafluorosulfanyl (SF5) groups display a unique set of physicochemical properties. This includes extreme kinetic and hydrolytic stability, very strong electron acceptor capability, and high lipophilicity with high SF5 electronegativity. A very high dipole moment can be achieved by the introduction of SF5 group without increasing molecular polarity. These properties make the pentafluorosulfanyl group an increasingly interesting structural motif for the design of bioactive compounds, including agrochemicals and pharmaceuticals as well as functional materials such as polymers or liquid crystals. However, access to SF5-containing compounds is very limited and their chemistry remains largely unexplored.

In this project we are developing new methodologies towards substituted (pentafluorosulfanyl)benzenes (Organic Letters 13: 1466-1469, 2011; Journal of Organic Chemistry 76: 4781-4786, 2011; Tetrahedron Letters 52: 4392-4394, 2011; Journal of Fluorine Chemistry 143: 130-134, 2012; European Journal of Organic Synthesis 2123-2126, 2012; Beilstein Journal of Organic Chemistry 1185-1190, 2012; Beilstein Journal of Organic Chemistry 9: 411-416, 2013; Synlett 855-859, 2013; Journal of Organic Chemistry 79: 8906-8911, 2014; Environmental Science and Pollution Research 21: 753-758, 2014; Journal of Fluorine Chemistry 157: 79-83, 2014; Beilstein Journal of Organic Chemistry 11: 1494-1502, 2015; Chemical Communications 52: 7237-7240, 2016;. Beilstein Journal of Organic Chemistry 12: 192–197, 2016; Beilstein Journal of Organic Chemistry 12: 110–116, 2016).

 
 

4. Chemistry of fluorinated phosphonates

We have developed new methodologies for nucleophilic transfer of fluorine-containing groups using fluorinated phosphonates (Chemické Listy 108: 926, 2014).

 
 

5. Properties of perfluorocarbon solvents

In this project we exploit extremely inert and hydrophobic properties of perfluorinated hydrocarbons by employing them as reaction media in enzyme-catalyzed processes. We perform biocatalysis (using isolated enzymes or whole cells) in perfluorocarbons. This brings advantages in product separation, modifies substrate and reaction scope, and improves selectivity (Chemical Communications: 1680-1681, 2002).

We also study miscibility of perfluorocarbons with ethers and alcohols (binary and ternary liquid-liquid equilibria) in collaboration with Doc. Řehák from ICT Prague (Journal of Fluorine Chemistry 129: 397-401, 2008; Journal of Chemical & Engineering Data 59: 3510-3516, 2014).

 
 

6. Synthesis and modifications of plant growth regulators

In 2004, germination promotor of many plant species worldwide has been isolated from the smoke of burning vegetation. This remarkable potent germination stimulant, with effective germination promotion observed at nanomolar concentrations (10-9M) was identified independently by Flematti and Van Staden as compound 1. Later, other derivatives have been identified in the smoke and this class of bioactive compounds is referred to as karrikins. In 2010, Van Staden discovered in the smoke also 3,4,5-trimethylfuran-2(5H)-one (TMB), the compound that inhibits germination of seeds and significantly reduces effect of karrikins.


This multidisciplinary project involving chemists, plant physiologists and molecular biologists, is focused on the study of mode of action of the above mentioned compounds, their effect to germination of seeds and grow of young plants (Annals of Botany 111: 489-497, 2013) as well as to the study of mutual effect of karrikins and TMB when applied simultaneously (New Phytologist 196: 1060-1073, 2012).

The main objective of the chemical part of this project is the synthesis of analogues of germination inhibitor for the purposes of structure-activity relationship (SAR) study. Modifications are carried out mainly in position C-5 (Journal of Plant Physiology 170: 1235-1242, 2013). Additionally, synthesis of halogen-, alkoxy-, aryloxyderivatives and esters is underway. Structure-activity relationship study of analogues differing in electronic and steric properties identifies the most active candidates that will be used for the synthesis of molecular probes for mode of action investigations.