Abstract
Five-membered azaheterocycles,
mostly suffered from various synthetic problems, hold a special status in pharmaceutical chemistry and life science. Here, based on green chemistry, a highly efficient
and remarkably regioselective photoreaction was developed under mild conditions
for constructing fused five-membered azaheterocycles with aggregation-induced emission
(AIE) characteristics. After
the photoreaction, one of the most noteworthy optical features is the abruptly increased
emission induced by UV irradiation. Making use of this, fluorescent photopatterns were readily
fabricated in solution and solid support with improved signal-to-background
ratio. Due to the excellent biocompatibility and unique chemical structure of
the azaheterocycles, selective mitochondria-targeted
cancer cell recognition was realized at an ultralow dye concentration. Notably,
an unusual photoamplification effect and an exceptional anti-photobleaching phenomenon
were observed thanks to the occurrence of the photoreaction. It is not
only the first time that fused five-membered azaheterocyclic AIE luminogen was synthesized
quantitatively via an unconventionally yet highly regioselective photoreaction, but also the first
attempt to combat photobleaching problem by the photoamplification effect.