Bioconjugatable, PEGylated hydroporphyrins for photochemistry and photomedicine. Narrow-band, red-emitting chlorins?
New Journal of Chemistry Pub Date: 2016-07-21 DOI: 10.1039/C6NJ01154C
Abstract
Chromophores that absorb and emit in the red spectral region (600–700 nm), are water soluble, and bear a bioconjugatable tether are relatively rare yet would fulfill many applications in photochemistry and photomedicine. Here, three molecular designs have been developed wherein stable synthetic chlorins – analogues of chlorophylls – have been tailored with PEG groups for use in aqueous solution. The designs differ with regard to order of the installation (pre/post-formation of the chlorin macrocycle) and position of the PEG groups. Six PEGylated synthetic chlorins (three free bases, three zinc chelates) have been prepared, of which four are equipped with a bioconjugatable (carboxylic acid) tether. The most effective design for aqueous solubilization entails facial encumbrance where PEG groups project above and below the plane of the hydrophobic disk-like chlorin macrocycle. The chlorins possess strong absorption at ~400 nm (B band) and in the red region (Qy band); regardless of wavelength of excitation, emission occurs in the red region. Excitation in the ~400 nm region thus provides an effective Stokes shift of >200 nm. The four bioconjugatable water-soluble chlorins exhibit Qy absorption/emission in water at 613/614, 636/638, 698/700 and 706/710 nm. The spectral properties are essentially unchanged in DMF and water for the facially encumbered chlorins, which also exhibit narrow Qy absorption and emission bands (full-width-at-half maximum of each <25 nm). The water-solubility was assessed by absorption spectroscopy over the concentration range ~0.4 μM–0.4 mM. One chlorin was conjugated to a mouse polyclonal IgG antibody for use in flow cytometry with compensation beads for proof-of-principle. The conjugate displayed a sharp signal when excited by a violet laser (405 nm) with emission in the 620–660 nm range. Taken together, the designs described herein augur well for development of a set of spectrally distinct chlorins with relatively sharp bands in the red region.
Recommended Literature
- [1] Evolutionary approaches in protein engineering towards biomaterial construction Brindha J.,Balamurali M. M.,Kaushik ChandaRSC Adv., 2019,9, 34720-34734 10.1039/C9RA06807D
- [2] EWOD-driven droplet microfluidic device integrated with optoelectronic tweezers as an automated platform for cellular isolation and analysis? Gaurav J. Shah,Eric P.-Y. Chiou,Ming C. Wu,Chang-Jin “CJ” KimLab Chip, 2009,9, 1732-1739 10.1039/B821508A
- [3] Evolution study of photo-synthesized gold nanoparticles by spectral deconvolution model: a quantitative approach Chung-Sung Yang,Mong-Shian Shih,Fang-Yi ChangNew J. Chem., 2006,30, 729-735 10.1039/B516465F
- [4] Emulsion soft templating of carbide-derived carbon nanospheres with controllable porosity for capacitive electrochemical energy storage? M. Zeiger,N. J?ckel,P. Strubel,L. Borchardt,R. Reinhold,W. Nickel,J. Eckert,V. Presser,S. KaskelJ. Mater. Chem. A, 2015,3, 17983-17990 10.1039/C5TA03730A
- [5] Establishing plasmon contribution to chemical reactions: alkoxyamines as a thermal probe? Olga Guselnikova,Gérard Audran,Jean-Patrick Joly,Andrii Trelin,Evgeny V. Tretyakov,Vaclav Svorcik,Oleksiy Lyutakov,Sylvain R. A. MarqueChem. Sci., 2021,12, 4154-4161 10.1039/D0SC06470J
- [6] Examination of deposit in commercial diluted phosphoric acid Analyst, 1880,5, 146-147 10.1039/AN8800500146
- [7] Enabling high-throughput single-animal gene-expression studies with molecular and micro-scale technologies Jason WanLab Chip, 2020,20, 4528-4538 10.1039/D0LC00881H
- [8] Dissociation of aryl sulfonyl phthalimide radical anions: relevance to the biological activity of arylsulfonyl amides? Abdelaziz Houmam,Emad M. HamedChem. Commun., 2012,48, 11328-11330 10.1039/C2CC36835H
- [9] Excitable dynamics in the bromate–sulfite–ferrocyanide reaction J. Zagora,M. Vosla?,L. Schreiberová,I. SchreiberPhys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2002,4, 1284-1291 10.1039/B110048C
- [10] Emulsifier-free, organotellurium-mediated living radical emulsion polymerization (emulsion TERP) of styrene: poly(dimethylaminoethyl methacrylate) macro-TERP agent? Yukiya KitayamaPolym. Chem., 2014,5, 2784-2792 10.1039/C3PY01539D
Journal Name:New Journal of Chemistry
research_products
-
CAS no.: 89640-58-4