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1.
Small Methods ; : e2301497, 2024 Mar 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38497095

ABSTRACT

The single-molecule localization concept MINFLUX has triggered a reevaluation of the features of fluorophores for attaining nanometer-scale resolution. MINFLUX nanoscopy benefits from temporally controlled fluorescence ("on"/"off") photoswitching. Combined with an irreversible switching behavior, the localization process is expected to turn highly efficient and quantitative data analysis simple. The potential in the recently reported photoactivable xanthone (PaX) dyes is recognized to extend the list of molecular switches used for MINFLUX with 561 nm excitation beyond the fluorescent protein mMaple. The MINFLUX localization success rates of PaX560 , PaX+560, and mMaple are quantitatively compared by analyzing the effective labeling efficiency of endogenously tagged nuclear pore complexes. The PaX dyes prove to be superior to mMaple and on par with the best reversible molecular switches routinely used in single-molecule localization microscopy. Moreover, the rationally designed PaX595 is introduced for complementing PaX560 in dual color 561 nm MINFLUX imaging based on spectral classification and the deterministic, irreversible, and additive-independent nature of PaX photoactivation is showcased in fast live-cell MINFLUX imaging. The PaX dyes meet the demands of MINFLUX for a robust readout of each label position and fill the void of reliable fluorophores dedicated to 561 nm MINFLUX imaging.

2.
Trends Cell Biol ; 2024 Jan 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38184400

ABSTRACT

Recently, biologists have gained access to several far-field fluorescence nanoscopy (FN) technologies that allow the observation of cellular components with ~20 nm resolution. FN is revolutionizing cell biology by enabling the visualization of previously inaccessible subcellular details. While technological advances in microscopy are critical to the field, optimal sample preparation and labeling are equally important and often overlooked in FN experiments. In this review, we provide an overview of the methodological and experimental factors that must be considered when performing FN. We present key concepts related to the selection of affinity-based labels, dyes, multiplexing, live cell imaging approaches, and quantitative microscopy. Consideration of these factors greatly enhances the effectiveness of FN, making it an exquisite tool for numerous biological applications.

3.
ACS Cent Sci ; 9(8): 1581-1590, 2023 Aug 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37637742

ABSTRACT

Here we describe highly compact, click compatible, and photoactivatable dyes for super-resolution fluorescence microscopy (nanoscopy). By combining the photoactivatable xanthone (PaX) core with a tetrazine group, we achieve minimally sized and highly sensitive molecular dyads for the selective labeling of unnatural amino acids introduced by genetic code expansion. We exploit the excited state quenching properties of the tetrazine group to attenuate the photoactivation rates of the PaX, and further reduce the overall fluorescence emission of the photogenerated fluorophore, providing two mechanisms of selectivity to reduce the off-target signal. Coupled with MINFLUX nanoscopy, we employ our dyads in the minimal-linkage-error imaging of vimentin filaments, demonstrating molecular-scale precision in fluorophore positioning.

4.
J Am Chem Soc ; 145(3): 1530-1534, 2023 01 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36626161

ABSTRACT

We designed caging-group-free photoactivatable live-cell permeant dyes with red fluorescence emission and ∼100 nm Stokes shifts based on a 1-vinyl-10-silaxanthone imine core structure. The proposed fluorophores undergo byproduct-free one- and two-photon activation, are suitable for multicolor fluorescence microscopy in fixed and living cells, and are compatible with super-resolution techniques such as STED (stimulated emission depletion) and PALM (photoactivated localization microscopy). Use of photoactivatable labels for strain-promoted tetrazine ligation and self-labeling protein tags (HaloTag, SNAP-tag), and duplexing of an imaging channel with another large Stokes shift dye have been demonstrated.


Subject(s)
Fluorescent Dyes , Fluorescent Dyes/chemistry , Microscopy, Fluorescence/methods , Ionophores
5.
Nat Chem ; 14(9): 1013-1020, 2022 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35864152

ABSTRACT

The controlled switching of fluorophores between non-fluorescent and fluorescent states is central to every super-resolution fluorescence microscopy (nanoscopy) technique, and the exploration of radically new switching mechanisms remains critical to boosting the performance of established, as well as emerging super-resolution methods. Photoactivatable dyes offer substantial improvements to many of these techniques, but often rely on photolabile protecting groups that limit their applications. Here we describe a general method to transform 3,6-diaminoxanthones into caging-group-free photoactivatable fluorophores. These photoactivatable xanthones (PaX) assemble rapidly and cleanly into highly fluorescent, photo- and chemically stable pyronine dyes upon irradiation with light. The strategy is extendable to carbon- and silicon-bridged xanthone analogues, yielding a family of photoactivatable labels spanning much of the visible spectrum. Our results demonstrate the versatility and utility of PaX dyes in fixed and live-cell labelling for conventional microscopy, as well as the coordinate-stochastic and deterministic nanoscopies STED, PALM and MINFLUX.


Subject(s)
Fluorescent Dyes , Silicon , Ionophores , Microscopy, Fluorescence
6.
ACS Sens ; 7(1): 166-174, 2022 01 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34985871

ABSTRACT

We report a chemically tuned fluorogenic electrophile designed to conduct live-cell super-resolution imaging by exploiting its stochastic reversible alkylation reaction with cellular nucleophiles. Consisting of a lipophilic BODIPY fluorophore tethered to an electrophilic cyanoacrylate warhead, the new probe cyanoAcroB remains nonemissive due to internal conversion along the cyanoacrylate moiety. Intermittent fluorescence occurs following thiolate Michael addition to the probe, followed by retro-Michael reaction, tuned by the cyano moiety in the acrylate warhead and BODIPY decoration. This design enables long-term super-resolved imaging of live cells by preventing fluorescent product accumulation and background increase, while preserving the pool of the probe. We demonstrate the imaging capabilities of cyanoAcroB via two methods: (i) single-molecule localization microscopy imaging with nanometer accuracy by stochastic chemical activation and (ii) super-resolution radial fluctuation. The latter tolerates higher probe concentrations and low imaging powers, as it exploits the stochastic adduct dissociation. Super-resolved imaging with cyanoAcroB reveals that electrophile alkylation is prevalent in mitochondria and endoplasmic reticulum. The 2D dynamics of these organelles within a single cell are unraveled with tens of nanometers spatial and sub-second temporal resolution through continuous imaging of cyanoAcroB extending for tens of minutes. Our work underscores the opportunities that reversible fluorogenic probes with bioinspired warheads bring toward illuminating chemical reactions with super-resolved features in live cells.


Subject(s)
Fluorescent Dyes , Mitochondria , Cyanoacrylates , Endoplasmic Reticulum , Fluorescent Dyes/chemistry , Microscopy, Fluorescence/methods
7.
Chem Rev ; 120(23): 12757-12787, 2020 12 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33211489

ABSTRACT

Our understanding of lipid peroxidation in biology and medicine is rapidly evolving, as it is increasingly implicated in various diseases but also recognized as a key part of normal cell function, signaling, and death (ferroptosis). Not surprisingly, the root and consequences of lipid peroxidation have garnered increasing attention from multiple disciplines in recent years. Here we "connect the dots" between the fundamental chemistry underpinning the cascade reactions of lipid peroxidation (enzymatic or free radical), the reactive nature of the products formed (lipid-derived electrophiles), and the biological targets and mechanisms associated with these products that culminate in cellular responses. We additionally bring light to the use of highly sensitive, fluorescence-based methodologies. Stemming from the foundational concepts in chemistry and biology, these methodologies enable visualizing and quantifying each reaction in the cascade in a cellular and ultimately tissue context, toward deciphering the connections between the chemistry and physiology of lipid peroxidation. The review offers a platform in which the chemistry and biomedical research communities can access a comprehensive summary of fundamental concepts regarding lipid peroxidation, experimental tools for the study of such processes, as well as the recent discoveries by leading investigators with an emphasis on significant open questions.


Subject(s)
Alzheimer Disease/metabolism , Antioxidants/metabolism , Alzheimer Disease/pathology , Animals , Antioxidants/chemistry , Free Radicals/chemistry , Free Radicals/metabolism , Humans , Lipid Peroxidation
8.
Photochem Photobiol Sci ; 18(8): 2003-2011, 2019 Aug 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31268087

ABSTRACT

Here we report the activatable photosensitizer BromoAcroB, a brominated BODIPY dye incorporating a reactive acrolein warhead. The acrolein moiety serves as an intramolecular switch, deactivating the BODIPY dye in its singlet and triplet excited states via internal conversion. Thiolate addition to this moiety disables the intramolecular quenching mechanism restoring the photosensitizing properties of the parent dye, characterized by a quantum yield of singlet oxygen photosensitization of 0.69 ± 0.02. In cell cultures, and upon thiol adduct formation, BromoAcroB induced light-dependent cell death in MRC-5 and HeLa cell lines. Using fluorescence microscopy and upon measuring the low yet non-negligible emission of the activated compound, we show that the phototoxicity of the dormant photosensitizer correlated with the quantity of BromoAcroB adducts generated. BromoAcroB thus serves as a dormant photosensitizer sensitive to intracellular electrophile response. Our results highlight the effective control of a triplet state process by modulation of an unsaturated moiety on the BODIPY scaffold and underscore the mechanistic opportunities arising for controlled singlet oxygen production in cells specifically sensitive to electrophile stress.


Subject(s)
Acrolein/pharmacology , Boron Compounds/pharmacology , Coloring Agents/pharmacology , Cysteine/pharmacology , Photosensitizing Agents/pharmacology , Singlet Oxygen/pharmacology , Acrolein/chemistry , Boron Compounds/chemistry , Cell Death/drug effects , Coloring Agents/chemical synthesis , Coloring Agents/chemistry , Cysteine/chemistry , HeLa Cells , Humans , Light , Microscopy, Fluorescence , Molecular Structure , Photosensitizing Agents/chemical synthesis , Photosensitizing Agents/chemistry , Quantum Theory , Singlet Oxygen/chemistry
9.
Photochem Photobiol ; 95(1): 192-201, 2019 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30481369

ABSTRACT

Fluorogenic analogues of α-tocopherol developed by our group have been instrumental in monitoring reactive oxygen species (ROS) within lipid membranes. Prepared as two-segment trap-reporter (chromanol-BODIPY) probes, photoinduced electron transfer (PeT) was utilized to provide these probes with an off/on switch mechanism warranting the necessary sensitivity. Herein, we rationalize within the context of Marcus theory of electron transfer how substituents on the BODIPY core and linker length joining the trap and reporter segments, tune PeT efficiency. DFT and electrochemical studies were used to estimate the thermodynamic driving force of PeT in our constructs. By tuning the redox potential over a 400 mV range, we observed over an order of magnitude increase in PeT efficiency. Increasing the linker length between the chromanol and BODIPY by 2.8 angstroms, in turn, decreased PeT efficiency 2.7-fold. Our results illustrate how substituent and linker choice enable "darkening" the off state of fluorogenic probes based on BODIPY fluorophores, by favoring PeT over radiative emission from the singlet excited state manifold. Ultimately, our work brings light to the sensitivity ceiling one may achieve in developing fluorogenic antioxidant analogues of α-tocopherol. The work provides general guidelines applicable to those developing fluorogenic probes based on PeT.

10.
Free Radic Biol Med ; 130: 471-477, 2019 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30465825

ABSTRACT

Oxidative stress, specifically lipid peroxidation, is a major driving force in neurodegenerative processes. However, the exact role of lipid peroxidation remains elusive as reliable real-time detection and quantification of lipid peroxyl radicals proves to be challenging in vitro and in vivo. Motivated by this methodological limitation, we have optimized conditions for real-time imaging and quantification of lipid peroxyl radical generation in primary neuron cultures using the lipophilic fluorogenic antioxidant H4BPMHC (8-((6-hydroxy-2,5,7,8-tetramethylchroman-2-yl)-methyl)-1,5-di(3-chloropropyl)-pyrromethene fluoroborate), an α-tocopherol analog probe. By subjecting neurons to different antioxidant conditions in the presence and absence of lipid peroxidation inducing stressors (Haber-Weiss reagents), we maximized H4BPMHC sensitivity and confirmed its potential to temporally resolve subtle and marked differences in lipid peroxidation levels in real-time. Herein we report imaging and quantification of homeostatic and induced lipid peroxidation in primary neuron cultures, supporting the use of this probe for investigating healthy and diseased states. Overall these results provide the necessary foundation and impetus towards using H4BPMHC for elucidating and mapping lipid peroxyl radical contributions to ROS-associated pathological processes in neurons.


Subject(s)
Antioxidants/pharmacology , Borates/pharmacology , Lipid Peroxidation/drug effects , Neurons/drug effects , Animals , Antioxidants/chemical synthesis , Antioxidants/chemistry , Borates/chemical synthesis , Borates/chemistry , Fluorescent Dyes/chemical synthesis , Fluorescent Dyes/chemistry , Fluorescent Dyes/pharmacology , Humans , Liposomes/chemistry , Liposomes/pharmacology , Molecular Imaging/methods , Neocortex/diagnostic imaging , Neocortex/metabolism , Neocortex/pathology , Oxidative Stress/drug effects , Peroxides/chemistry , Peroxides/metabolism , Primary Cell Culture , Rats , Reactive Oxygen Species/metabolism
11.
Free Radic Biol Med ; 128: 124-136, 2018 11 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29649566

ABSTRACT

Lipid peroxidation of polyunsaturated fatty acids in cells may occur via their catalytic autoxidation through peroxyl radicals under oxidative stress conditions. Lipid peroxidation is related to a number of pathologies, and may be invoked in new forms of regulated cell death, yet it may also have beneficial roles in cell signaling cascades. Antioxidants are a natural line of defense against lipid peroxidation, and may accordingly impact the biological outcome associated with the redox chemistry of lipid peroxidation. Critical to unraveling the physiological and pathological role of lipid peroxidation is the development of novel probes with the partition, chemical sensitivity and more importantly, molecular specificity, enabling the spatial and temporal imaging of peroxyl radicals in the lipid membranes of live cells, reporting on the redox status of the cell membrane. This review describes our recent progress to visualize lipid peroxidation in model membrane systems and in live cell studies. Our work portrays the mechanistic insight leading to the development of a highly sensitive probe to monitor lipid peroxyl radicals (LOO•). It also describes technical aspects including reagents and fluorescence microscopy methodologies to consider in order to achieve the much sought after monitoring of rates of lipid peroxyl radical production in live cell studies, be it under oxidative stress but also under cell homeostasis. This review seeks to bring attention to the study of lipid redox reactions and to lay the groundwork for the adoption of fluorogenic antioxidant probeshancement and maximum intensity recorded in turn provide a benchmark to estimate, when compared to the control BODIPY dye lacking the intramolecular PeT based switch, the overall exte and related fluorescence microscopy methods toward gaining rich spatiotemporal information on lipid peroxidation in live cells.


Subject(s)
Cell Membrane/metabolism , Fluorescent Dyes/chemistry , Lipid Peroxidation , Lipids/analysis , Microscopy, Fluorescence/methods , Peroxides/analysis , Spatio-Temporal Analysis , Animals , Humans
12.
J Am Chem Soc ; 139(45): 16273-16281, 2017 11 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28976196

ABSTRACT

Protein and DNA alkylation by endogenously produced electrophiles is associated with the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative diseases, to epigenetic alterations and to cell signaling and redox regulation. With the goal of visualizing, in real-time, the spatiotemporal response of the cell milieu to electrophiles, we have designed a fluorogenic BODIPY-acrolein probe, AcroB, that undergoes a >350-fold fluorescence intensity enhancement concomitant with protein adduct formation. AcroB enables a direct quantification of single post-translational modifications occurring on cellular proteins via recording fluorescence bursts in live-cell imaging studies. In combination with super-resolution imaging, protein alkylation events may be registered and individually counted, yielding a map of protein-electrophile reactions within the cell lipid milieu. Alkylation is predominantly observed within mitochondria, a source, yet not a sink, of AcroB adducts, illustrating that a mitochondrial constitutive excretion mechanism ensures rapid disposal of compromised proteins. Sorting within the Golgi apparatus and trafficking along microtubules and through the cell endo- and exocytic pathways can be next visualized via live-cell imaging. Our results offer a direct visualization of cellular response to a noncanonical acrolein warhead. We envision AcroB will enable new approaches for diagnosis of pathologies associated with defective cellular trafficking. AcroB may help elucidate key aspects of mitochondria electrophile adduct excretion and cell endocytic and exocytic pathways. Conceptually, AcroB provides a new paradigm on fluorescence microscopy studies where chemical perturbation is achieved and simultaneously reported by the probe.


Subject(s)
Acrolein/chemistry , Boron Compounds/chemistry , Fluorescent Dyes/analysis , Fluorescent Dyes/chemistry , Mitochondria/metabolism , Alkylation , Biological Transport , Cell Survival , Endocytosis , Exocytosis , Fibroblasts , Golgi Apparatus/metabolism , HeLa Cells , Humans , Lung/cytology , Microscopy, Fluorescence/methods , Microtubules/metabolism
13.
J Am Chem Soc ; 139(44): 15801-15811, 2017 11 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29043787

ABSTRACT

Reactive oxygen species (ROS) and their associated byproducts have been traditionally associated with a range of pathologies. It is now believed, however, that at basal levels these molecules also have a beneficial cellular function in the form of cell signaling and redox regulation. Critical to elucidating their physiological role is the opportunity to visualize and quantify the production of ROS with spatiotemporal accuracy. Armed with a newly developed, extremely sensitive fluorogenic α-tocopherol analogue (H4BPMHC), we report herein the observation of steady concentrations of lipid peroxyl radicals produced in live cell imaging conditions. Imaging studies with H4BPMHC indicate that the rate of production of lipid peroxyl radicals in HeLa cells under basal conditions is 33 nM/h within the cell. Our work further provides indisputable evidence on the antioxidant role of Vitamin E, as lipid peroxidation was suppressed in HeLa cells both under basal conditions and in the presence of Haber-Weiss chemistry, generated by the presence of cumyl hydroperoxide and Cu2+ in solution, when supplemented with the α-tocopherol surrogate, PMHC (2,2,5,7,8-pentamethyl-6-hydroxy-chromanol, an α-tocopherol analogue lacking the phytyl tail). H4BPMHC has the sensitivity needed to detect trace changes in oxidative status within the lipid membrane, underscoring the opportunity to illuminate the physiological relevance of lipid peroxyl radical production during cell homeostasis and disease.


Subject(s)
Fluorescent Dyes/chemistry , Optical Imaging/methods , Peroxides/metabolism , Reactive Oxygen Species/metabolism , alpha-Tocopherol/analogs & derivatives , Fluorescent Dyes/metabolism , HeLa Cells , Homeostasis , Humans , Lipid Peroxidation , Oxidation-Reduction , Peroxides/analysis , Reactive Oxygen Species/analysis , alpha-Tocopherol/metabolism
14.
ACS Omega ; 2(12): 8618-8624, 2017 Dec 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31457394

ABSTRACT

We describe herein a fluorescence-based assay to characterize and report on nucleophilic addition to carbonyl moieties and highlight the advantages a fluorescence-based assay and multiplex analysis can offer. The assay relies on the fluorogenic properties of meso-formyl boron-dipyrromethene (BODIPY) dyes that become emissive following nucleophilic addition. A reactivity palette is assembled based on the increasing electrophilic character of five meso-formyl BODIPY compounds tested. We show that increasing rates of emission enhancement correlate with the decreasing electrophilic character of BODIPY dyes in the presence of an acid catalyst and a nucleophile. These results are consistent with the rate-limiting step involving activation of the electrophile. Increasing product formation is shown to correlate with the increasing electrophilic character of the BODIPY dyes, as expected based on thermodynamics. In addition to providing rates of reaction, analysis of the fluorescence parameters for the reaction mixtures, including emission quantum yields and fluorescence lifetimes, enables us to determine the extent of reactant conversion at equilibrium (in our case the estimated yield of a transient species) and the presence of different products, without the need for isolation. We anticipate that our reactivity palette approach, combined with the in-depth fluorescence analysis discussed herein, will provide guidelines toward developing fluorogenic assays of reactivity offering multiplex information, beyond fluorescence intensity.

15.
J Am Chem Soc ; 138(4): 1215-25, 2016 Feb 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26789198

ABSTRACT

Here we show the design, preparation, and characterization of a dormant singlet oxygen ((1)O2) photosensitizer that is activated upon its reaction with reactive oxygen species (ROS), including (1)O2 itself, in what constitutes an autocatalytic process. The compound is based on a two segment photosensitizer-trap molecule where the photosensitizer segment consists of a Br-substituted boron-dipyrromethene (BODIPY) dye. The trap segment consists of the chromanol ring of α-tocopherol, the most potent naturally occurring lipid soluble antioxidant. Time-resolved absorption, fluorescence, and (1)O2 phosphorescence studies together with fluorescence and (1)O2 phosphorescence emission quantum yields collected on Br2B-PMHC and related bromo and iodo-substituted BODIPY dyes show that the trap segment provides a total of three layers of intramolecular suppression of (1)O2 production. Oxidation of the trap segment with ROS restores the sensitizing properties of the photosensitizer segment resulting in ∼40-fold enhancement in (1)O2 production. The juxtaposed antioxidant (chromanol) and prooxidant (Br-BODIPY) antagonistic chemical activities of the two-segment compound enable the autocatalytic, and in general ROS-mediated, activation of (1)O2 sensitization providing a chemical cue for the spatiotemporal control of (1)O2.The usefulness of this approach to selectively photoactivate the production of singlet oxygen in ROS stressed vs regular cells was successfully tested via the photodynamic inactivation of a ROS stressed Gram negative Escherichia coli strain.


Subject(s)
Photochemotherapy , Photosensitizing Agents/chemistry , Reactive Oxygen Species/chemistry , Singlet Oxygen/chemistry , Boron Compounds/chemistry
16.
J Phys Chem B ; 119(13): 4758-65, 2015 Apr 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25751527

ABSTRACT

We report herein spectroscopy and computational results that illustrate an efficient intramolecular deactivation pathway for meso-unsaturated boron-dipyrromethene (BODIPY) dyes in their singlet excited state. Our results show that the mechanism hinges on the structural flexibility imparted by the boron atom and on the energetic stabilization conferred by extending the conjugation into the meso substituent, which is otherwise unconjugated in the ground state. Following photoexcitation, rotation along the dihedral angle of the meso-unsaturated group results in its conjugation at the expense of shifting one pyrrole moiety in dipyrrin out of the plane. Internal conversion to an energetically hot, ground-state species efficiently competes with emission. The mechanism applies to meso-vinyl, -formyl, and -iminyl moieties. The presence of methyl groups at positions C1 and C7 exacerbates the energetic penalty toward conjugation of the meso groups leading to a small energy gap between relaxed excited state and ground state and undetected emission quantum yields. Importantly, methyls at C1 and C7 prevent nonradiative deactivation in meso-aryl moieties, illustrating that when push comes to shove, the energetic (kinetic) barrier toward reaching conjugation is too large for aryl moieties but low enough for smaller groups to effectively compete with radiative transitions. Wisely chosen meso-unsaturated BODIPY dyes may serve as richly sensitive platforms for the preparation of novel fluorogenic substrates to monitor chemical reactions or to probe the rigidity of their surrounding environment.

17.
J Am Chem Soc ; 137(3): 1116-22, 2015 Jan 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25594101

ABSTRACT

The photostability of reporter fluorophores in single-molecule fluorescence imaging is of paramount importance, as it dictates the amount of relevant information that may be acquired before photobleaching occurs. Quenchers of triplet excited states are thus required to minimize blinking and sensitization of singlet oxygen. Through a combination of single-molecule studies and ensemble mechanistic studies including laser flash photolysis and time-resolved fluorescence, we demonstrate herein that Ni(2+) provides a much desired physical route (chemically inert) to quench the triplet excited state of Cy3, the most ubiquitous green emissive dye utilized in single-molecule studies.


Subject(s)
Carbocyanines/chemistry , Molecular Imaging , Nickel/chemistry , Singlet Oxygen/analysis , Fluorescence , Molecular Structure , Photochemical Processes
18.
J Phys Chem A ; 118(45): 10622-30, 2014 Nov 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25066755

ABSTRACT

Here we formulate equations based solely on empirical Hammett substituent constants to predict the redox potentials for the electronic excited state of boron-dipyrromethene (BODIPY) dyes. We utilized computational, spectroscopic, and electrochemical techniques toward characterizing the effect of substitution at the positions C2, C6, and C8 of the 1,3,5,7-tetramethyl BODIPY core. Working with a library of 100 BODIPY dyes, we found that highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO) energies calculated at the B3LYP 6-31g(d) level correlated linearly with the Hammett σm value for substituents at position C8 and with Hammett σp values for substituents at positions C2 and C6. In turn, we observed that LUMO energies correlated linearly with Hammett σp at position C8 and with Hammett σm at positions C2 and C6. Focusing on a subset of 26 dyes for which reduction potentials were either previously available or measured herein and ranged from -1.84 to -0.52 V (a full 1.3 V), we found a linear relationship between redox potentials in acetonitrile and HOMO and lowest unoccupied molecule orbital (LUMO) energies determined via density functional theory (DFT). A linear correlation was thus ultimately established between redox potentials in acetonitrile and Hammett substituent constants. Combining this with equations derived for the linear relationship existing between the zero vibrational energy of the excited BODIPY and Hammett substituent constants enabled us to provide the parameters toward predicting the oxidizing/reducing power of photoexcited 1,3,5,7,-tetramethyl BODIPY dyes in their singlet excited state.

19.
J Am Chem Soc ; 135(45): 17161-75, 2013 Nov 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24127659

ABSTRACT

Members of a family of Ru(II)-appended pyrenylethynylene dyads were synthesized, characterized according to their photophysical and photobiological properties, and evaluated for their collective potential as photosensitizers for metal-organic photodynamic therapy. The dyads in this series possess lowest-lying (3)IL-based excited states with lifetimes that can be tuned from 22 to 270 µs in fluid solution and from 44 to 3440 µs in glass at 77 K. To our knowledge, these excited-state lifetimes are the longest reported for Ru(II)-based dyads containing only one organic chromophore and lacking terminal diimine groups. These excited states proved to be extremely sensitive to trace amounts of oxygen, owing to their long lifetimes and very low radiative rates. Herein, we demonstrate that (3)IL states of this nature are potent photodynamic agents, exhibiting the largest photocytotoxicity indices reported to date with nanomolar light cytotoxicities at very short drug-to-light intervals. Importantly, these new agents are robust enough to maintain submicromolar PDT in pigmented metastatic melanoma cells, where the presence of melanin in combination with low oxygen tension is known to compromise PDT. This activity underscores the potential of metal-organic PDT as an alternate treatment strategy for challenging environments such as malignant melanoma.


Subject(s)
Lung Neoplasms/drug therapy , Lung Neoplasms/secondary , Melanoma/drug therapy , Melanoma/pathology , Photosensitizing Agents/pharmacology , Ruthenium/pharmacology , Adult , Cell Line, Tumor , Humans , Lung/drug effects , Lung/pathology , Lung Neoplasms/pathology , Male , Organometallic Compounds/chemistry , Organometallic Compounds/pharmacology , Photochemotherapy , Photosensitizing Agents/chemistry , Ruthenium/chemistry
20.
Inorg Chem ; 49(6): 2889-900, 2010 Mar 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20146527

ABSTRACT

Several mononuclear Ru(II) dyads possessing 1,10-phenanthroline-appended pyrenylethynylene ligands were synthesized, characterized, and evaluated for their potential in photobiological applications such as photodynamic therapy (PDT). These complexes interact with DNA via intercalation and photocleave DNA in vitro at submicromolar concentrations when irradiated with visible light (lambda(irr) > or = 400 nm). Such properties are remarkably sensitive to the position of the ethynylpyrenyl substituent on the 1,10-phenanthroline ring, with 3-substitution showing the strongest binding under all conditions and causing the most deleterious DNA damage. Both dyads photocleave DNA under hypoxic conditions, and this photoactivity translates well to cytotoxicity and photocytotoxicity models using human leukemia cells, where the 5- and 3-substituted dyads show photocytotoxicity at 5-10 microM and 10-20 microM, respectively, with minimal, or essentially no, dark toxicity at these concentrations. This lack of dark cytotoxicity at concentrations where significant photoactivity is observed emphasizes that agents with strong intercalating units, previously thought to be too toxic for phototherapeutic applications, should not be excluded from the arsenal of potential photochemotherapeutic agents under investigation.


Subject(s)
Phenanthrolines/pharmacology , Photobiology , Ruthenium Compounds/pharmacology , DNA/drug effects , DNA Damage , HL-60 Cells , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Mass Spectrometry , Phenanthrolines/chemistry , Spectrophotometry, Ultraviolet
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