Abstract
Due to the formation of hydrolysis-susceptible adducts, the 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition between an azide and strained
-cyclooctene (TCO) has been disregarded in the field of bioorthogonal chemistry. We report a method which uses the instability of the adducts to our advantage in a prodrug activation strategy. The reaction of
-cyclooctenol (TCO-OH) with a model prodrug resulted in a rapid 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition with second-order rates of 0.017 M
s
and 0.027 M
s
for the equatorial and axial isomers, respectively, resulting in release of the active compound.
H NMR studies showed that activation proceeded
a triazoline and imine, both of which are rapidly hydrolyzed to release the model drug. Cytotoxicity of a doxorubicin prodrug was restored
upon activation with TCO-OH, while with
-cyclooctenol (CCO-OH) no activation was observed. The data also demonstrates the potential of this reaction in organic synthesis as a mild orthogonal protecting group strategy for amino and hydroxyl groups.