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1.
Chem Asian J ; : e202400965, 2024 Sep 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39253774

ABSTRACT

Room temperature phosphorescent (RTP) probes have significant advantages in the field of cellular imaging, as their long lifetimes can prevent interference from the spontaneous fluorescence of organisms. Persulfurated arenes are a typical RTP molecular parent nucleus. However, most of the applied research on them is concentrated in anti-counterfeiting, and relatively few are applied in bioimaging. The molecular structure and structure-property relationship of them applied in bioimaging are still in the exploration stage. In this work, we have designed and synthesized a series of RTP probes with long alkyl chains, all of which can be targeted to mitochondria with good water solubility for mitochondria-targeted imaging. Further, we investigated the effect of alkyl chains on the luminescence properties of these probes, and found that the moderate length of alkyl chains can realize the enhancement of phosphorescence intensity. We believe this finding is of guiding significance for the design of molecular structures in the field of RTP probes.

2.
Adv Mater ; 36(29): e2401145, 2024 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38692574

ABSTRACT

Photopyroptosis is an emerging research branch of photodynamic therapy (PDT), whereas there remains a lack of molecular structural principles to fabricate photosensitizers for triggering a highly efficient pyroptosis. Herein, a general and rational structural design principle to implement this hypothesis, is proposed. The principle relies on the clamping of cationic moieties (e.g., pyridinium, imidazolium) onto one photosensitive core to facilitate a considerable mitochondrial targeting (both of the inner and the outer membranes) of the molecules, thus maximizing the photogenerated reactive oxygen species (ROS) at the specific site to trigger the gasdermin E-mediated pyroptosis. Through this design, the pyroptotic trigger can be achieved in a minimum of 10 s of irradiation with a substantially low light dosage (0.4 J cm⁻2), compared to relevant work reported (up to 60 J cm⁻2). Moreover, immunotherapy with high tumor inhibition efficiency is realized by applying the synthetic molecules alone. This structural paradigm is valuable for deepening the understanding of PDT (especially the mitochondrial-targeted PDT) from the perspective of pyroptosis, toward the future development of the state-of-the-art form of PDT.


Subject(s)
Photochemotherapy , Photosensitizing Agents , Pyroptosis , Reactive Oxygen Species , Photosensitizing Agents/chemistry , Photosensitizing Agents/pharmacology , Pyroptosis/drug effects , Humans , Reactive Oxygen Species/metabolism , Animals , Mice , Cell Line, Tumor , Mitochondria/metabolism , Mitochondria/drug effects , Light
3.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 15(18): 22415-22425, 2023 May 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37104144

ABSTRACT

Room-temperature phosphorescent carbon dots (RTPCDs) have attracted considerable interests due to their unique nanoluminescent characteristic with time resolution. However, it is still a formidable challenge to construct multiple stimuli-activated RTP behaviors on CDs. Since the address of this issue facilitates complex and high-regulatable phosphorescent applications, we here develop a novel strategy to achieve a multiple stimuli responsive phosphorescent activation on a single carbon-dot system (S-CDs), using persulfurated aromatic carboxylic acid as the precursor. The introduction of aromatic carbonyl groups and multiple S atoms can promote the intersystem crossing process to generate RTP characteristic of the produced CDs. Meanwhile, by introducing these functional surface groups into S-CDs, the RTP property can be activated by light, acid, and thermal stimuli in solution or in film state. In this way, multistimuli responsive and tunable RTP characteristics are realized in the single carbon-dot system. Based on this set of RTP properties, S-CDs is applied to photocontrolled imaging in living cells, anticounterfeit label, and multilevel information encryption. Our work will benefit the development of multifunctional nanomaterials together with extending their application scope.

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