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Pyrene derivatives bearing substituents at positions 1, 3, 6, and 8 find numerous applications, as exemplified by their use in lasers, sensors, and bioimaging probes. However, these derivatives typically have point-symmetric or short-axially symmetric structures, whereas long-axially symmetric derivatives remain underexplored because of the difficulty in obtaining their precursor, 1,3-dibromopyrene. To address this problem, we herein synthesized 1,3-dibromopyrene from 1-methoxypyrene in an overall yield (71 % over four steps) considerably exceeding those of existing methods. 1,3-Dibromopyrene was converted into 13OPA, a long-axially symmetric pyrene dye with electron-donor (alkoxy) groups at positions 1 and 3 and electron-acceptor (formyl) groups at positions 6 and 8. 13OPA exhibited photophysical properties distinct from those of its point-symmetric and short-axially symmetric isomers, featuring a broad and strongly redshifted absorption, strong fluorescence with reduced sensitivity to protic solvents, and small dipole moment change upon photoexcitation. The derivatization of 13OPA into a Schiff base and its functionalization via Lewis acid-base pairing were also demonstrated. Thus, our work expands the design scope of pyrene-based molecules, particularly those used as emitters.
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The polarity of the biological membrane, or lipid order, regulates many cellular events. It is generally believed that the plasma membrane polarity is regulated according to cell type and function, sometimes even within a cell. Neurons have a variety of functionally specialized subregions, each of which bears distinct proteins and lipids, and the membrane polarity of the subregions may differ accordingly. However, no direct experimental evidence of it has been presented to date. In the present study, we used a cell-impermeable solvatochromic membrane probe NR12A to investigate the local polarity of the plasma membrane of neurons. Both in hippocampal and cerebellar granule neurons, growth cones have higher membrane polarity than the cell body. In addition, the overall variation in the polarity value of each pixel was greater in the growth cone than in cell bodies, suggesting that the lateral diffusion and/or dynamics of the growth cone membrane are greater than other parts of the neuron. These tendencies were much less notably observed in the lamellipodia of a non-neuronal cell. Our results suggest that the membrane polarity of neuronal growth cones is unique and this characteristic may be important for its structure and function.
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Corpo Celular , Cones de Crescimento , Neurônios/metabolismo , Membrana Celular , Hipocampo , Células CultivadasRESUMO
Solvatochromic dyes enable sensing and imaging of biomolecular organization in living systems by monitoring local polarity (lipophilicity), but most such dyes suffer from limited brightness, photostability, lack of a convenient spectral range, and limited sensitivity to polarity. Moreover, the presence of an electron acceptor group, typically a carbonyl, in its push-pull structure raises concerns about its potential chemical reactivity within the biological environment. In order to achieve robust bioimaging, we synthesized a push-pull pyrene probe bearing a ketone acceptor group (PK) and compared it with a recently developed aldehyde analogue (PA). We found that in live cells the aldehyde analogue PA transforms slowly (in â¼100 min) into blue-emissive species, assigned to in situ formation of an imine analogue, whereas the PK probe is stable in the presence of primary amines and inside cells. Like the parent PA, the new probe shows strong solvatochromism and an emission color response to lipid order in membranes (ordered vs disordered liquid phases), while its blue-shifted absorption is more optimal for excitation with 400 nm light sources. In live cells, the PK probe enables high-contrast polarity mapping of organelles using two-color ratiometric detection, suggesting that polarity increases in the following order: lipid droplets < plasma membranes < endoplasmic reticulum. In the zebrafish embryo, polarity imaging with the PK probe reveals a new dimension in visualizing the organization of tissues-lipophilicity distribution, where biomembranes, lipid droplets, cells, yolk, extracellular space, and newly formed organs are revealed by specific emission wavelengths of the probe. The newly developed probe and the proposed approach of polarity mapping open new opportunities for bioimaging at the cellular and animal level.
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Corantes Fluorescentes/química , Pirenos/química , Animais , Células HeLa , Humanos , Microscopia Confocal , Microscopia de Fluorescência , Estrutura Molecular , Imagem Óptica , Peixe-Zebra/embriologiaRESUMO
To replace molecular biological and immunological methods, biosensors have recently been developed for the rapid and sensitive detection of bacteria. Among a wide variety of biological materials, bacteriophages have received increasing attention as promising alternatives to antibodies in biosensor applications. Thus, we herein present a rapid and highly selective detection method for pathogenic bacteria, which combines dark-field light scattering imaging with a plasmonic biosensor system. The plasmonic biosensor system employs bacteriophages as the biorecognition element and the aggregation-induced light scattering signal of gold nanoparticle-assembled silica nanospheres as a signal transducer. Using Staphylococcus aureus strain SA27 as a model analyte, we demonstrated that the plasmonic biosensor system detects S. aureus in the presence of excess Escherichia coli in a highly selective manner. After the sample and the S. aureus phage S13'-conjugated plasmon scattering probe were mixed, S. aureus detection was completed within 15-20 min with a detection limit of 8 × 104 colony forming units per milliliter.
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Bacteriófagos/química , Técnicas Biossensoriais/métodos , Ouro/química , Nanopartículas Metálicas/química , Microscopia , Dióxido de Silício/química , Staphylococcus aureus/isolamento & purificação , Bacteriófagos/metabolismo , Escuridão , Staphylococcus aureus/metabolismoRESUMO
The systematic synthesis of five 1-, 3-, 6-, and 8-tetrasubstituted asymmetric pyrenes with electron donor and acceptor moieties is presented, together with an examination of their photophysical properties. Pyrene derivative PA1, containing one formyl and three piperidyl groups, showed bright solvatochromic fluorescence from green (λem = 557 nm, ΦFL = 0.94 in hexane) to red (λem = 648 nm, ΦFL = 0.50 in methanol), suggesting potential applications for PA1 as an environmentally responsive probe. Although the synthesis of simple 1- and 3-disubstituted pyrene derivatives is considered difficult, PA13, with two formyl groups at the 1- and 3-positions and two piperidyl groups at the 6- and 8-positions, could be synthesized successfully. PA13 exhibited less pronounced solvatochromism, but displayed a narrow fluorescent band with high ΦFL in all solvents (ΦFL > 0.75). Moreover, its absorption band displayed an exceptional bathochromic shift compared to the other derivatives (e.g., λabs = 480 and 522 nm in ethanol for PA1 and PA13, respectively), suggesting that such modifications of pyrene may be quite important for the modulation of its energy gap. Additionally, all compounds exhibited exceptionally high photostability, which highlights the advantage of these new dyes and provides new insights on the design of photostable fluorophores.
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Stimuli-response nanoparticles have emerged as powerful tools for imaging and therapeutic applications. Ideally, they should be assembled from biodegradable materials featuring small size and cooperative response to biological stimuli that trigger particle disassembly and release of an active molecule that could be readily monitored in situ. A concept is developed that consists of organic nanoparticles, assembled from fluorescent amphiphiles and polymerized with a redox-cleavable cross-linker. We obtained 20â nm nanoparticles bearing self-quenched Nile Red dye residues, which can disassemble in living cells into highly fluorescent molecular units owing to an external or internal reductive stimulus. The obtained results pave the way to new stimuli-responsive nanomaterials for applications in background-free imaging as well as in drug delivery, as the concept can be further extended to other active molecules including drugs and to cross-linkers cleavable by other biological stimuli.
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Micelas , Nanopartículas/análise , Imagem Óptica , Oxazinas/análise , Sobrevivência Celular , Reagentes de Ligações Cruzadas/química , Fluorescência , Células HeLa , Humanos , Oxirredução , PolimerizaçãoRESUMO
Sweat is an essential protection system for the body, but its failure can result in pathologic conditions, including several skin diseases, such as palmoplantar pustulosis (PPP). As reduced intraepidermal E-cadherin expression in skin lesions was confirmed in PPP skin lesions, a role for interleukin (IL)-1-rich sweat in PPP has been proposed, and IL-1 has been implicated in the altered E-cadherin expression observed in both cultured keratinocytes and mice epidermis. For further investigation, live imaging of sweat perspiration on a mouse toe-pad under two-photon excitation microscopy was performed using a novel fluorescent dye cocktail (which we named JSAC). Finally, intraepidermal vesicle formation which is the main cause of PPP pathogenesis was successfully induced using our "LASER-snipe" technique with JSAC. "LASER-snipe" is a type of laser ablation technique that uses two-photon absorption of fluorescent material to destroy a few acrosyringium cells at a pinpoint location in three-dimensional space of living tissue to cause eccrine sweat leakage. These observatory techniques and this mouse model may be useful not only in live imaging for physiological phenomena in vivo such as PPP pathomechanism investigation, but also for the field of functional physiological morphology.
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Psoríase , Pele , Animais , Camundongos , Pele/metabolismo , Suor/metabolismo , Psoríase/metabolismo , Epiderme/metabolismo , Glândulas Écrinas/metabolismo , Interleucina-1/metabolismo , Imagem Óptica/efeitos adversos , Caderinas/metabolismoRESUMO
True colors: Novel pyrene analogues of Prodan exhibit outstanding photophysical properties with remarkably high fluorescence quantum yield (QY) in solvents ranging from apolar hexane to polar methanol (see figure). This is accompanied by strong solvatochromism and large Stokes shifts. These properties have not been previously achieved in enormous solvatochromic dyes, but are quite useful for emitting materials and imaging tools.
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2-Naftilamina/análogos & derivados , Corantes Fluorescentes/síntese química , Pirenos/síntese química , 2-Naftilamina/síntese química , 2-Naftilamina/química , Fluorescência , Corantes Fluorescentes/química , Pirenos/químicaRESUMO
We have systematically synthesized 1-, 3-, 6-, and 8-alkyl-substituted pyrene derivatives using the latest synthesis methods and investigated the effects of alkyl substitution on the photophysical properties of the pyrene chromophore. Like the trimethylsilyl group, which is known to enhance the fluorescence properties of some chromophores through σ*-π* conjugation, alkyl groups (primary, secondary, and tertiary) enhanced the fluorescence quantum yield of the pyrene chromophore through σ-π conjugation in most cases. While these enhancements in the fluorescence quantum yield were beyond expectations, the results were supported by absolute measurements. These results also indicate that ubiquitous alkyl groups can be used to tune the photophysical properties of the pyrene chromophore, as well as to improve the solubility or prevent aggregation. In other words, they can be used to develop new photofunctional materials.
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Fluorescência , Pirenos/química , Pirenos/síntese química , Alquilação , Estrutura Molecular , Processos Fotoquímicos , Teoria Quântica , Espectrometria de Fluorescência , Espectrofotometria UltravioletaRESUMO
Current biomedical applications of nanocarriers are focused on drug delivery, where encapsulated cargo is released in the target tissues under the control of external stimuli. Here, we propose a very different approach, where the active toxic molecules are removed from biological tissues by the nanocarrier. It is based on the drug-sponge concept, where specific molecules are captured by the lipid nanoemulsion (NE) droplets due to dynamic covalent chemistry inside their oil core. To this end, we designed a highly lipophilic amine (LipoAmine) capable of reacting with a free cargo-aldehyde (fluorescent dye and 4-hydroxynonenal toxin) directly inside lipid NEs, yielding a lipophilic imine conjugate well encapsulated in the oil core. The formation of imine bonds was first validated using a push-pull pyrene aldehyde dye, which changes its emission color during the reaction. The conjugate formation was independently confirmed by mass spectrometry. As a result, LipoAmine-loaded NEs spontaneously loaded cargo-aldehydes, yielding formulations stable against leakage at pH 7.4, which can further release the cargo in a low pH range (4-6) in solutions and living cells. Using fluorescence microscopy, we showed that LipoAmine NEs can extract pyrene aldehyde dye from cells as well as from an epithelial tissue (chicken skin). Moreover, successful extraction from cells was also achieved for a highly toxic aliphatic aldehyde 4-hydroxynonenal, which allowed obtaining the proof of concept for detoxification of living cells. Taken together, these results show that the dynamic imine chemistry inside NEs can be used to develop detoxification platforms.
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Portadores de Fármacos , Iminas , Portadores de Fármacos/química , Preparações de Ação Retardada , Aldeídos , LipídeosRESUMO
Here we report the substitution effects of N-alkyl and N,N-dialkyl carboxamide groups on the fluorescence properties of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon chromophores, so as to control their fluorescence properties. The fluorescence properties of compounds obtained using solvents with different polarities showed very little change, indicating that the modified compounds do not form charge transfer states. TD-DFT calculations and measurements performed at low temperature (78 K) and in viscous solvents revealed that the N-alkyl and N,N-dialkyl carboxamide groups tend to reduce the contributions from intersystem crossing and increase those from internal conversion. Considering that the fluorescence mechanism of low-fluorescence carbonyl compounds such as aldehyde and ketone is dominated by intersystem crossing and that of high-luminescence carbonyl compounds such as carboxylic acid and ester is dominated by a radiative process, it can be said that the photophysical process of N-alkyl and N,N-dialkyl carboxamides is novel. In addition, the calculation results for excited states indicated that such contributions can be controlled by selecting the appropriate polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon or amide structure, in addition to solvent viscosity and temperature.
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Insulin balls, localized insulin amyloids formed at the site of repeated insulin injections in patients with diabetes, cause poor glycemic control and cytotoxicity. Our previous study has shown that insulin forms two types of amyloids; toxic amyloid formed from the intact insulin ((i)-amyloid) and less-toxic amyloid formed in the presence of the reducing reagent TCEP ((r)-amyloid), suggesting insulin amyloid polymorphism. However, the differences in the formation mechanism and cytotoxicity expression are still unclear. Herein, we demonstrate that the liquid droplets, which are stabilized by electrostatic interactions, appear only in the process of toxic (i)-amyloid formation, but not in the less-toxic (r)-amyloid formation process. The effect of various additives such as arginine, 1,6-hexanediol, and salts on amyloid formation was also examined to investigate interactions that are important for amyloid formation. Our results indicate that the maturation processes of these two amyloids were significantly different, whereas the nucleation by hydrophobic interactions was similar. These results also suggest the difference in the formation mechanism of two different insulin amyloids is attributed to the difference in the intermolecular interactions and could be correlated with the cytotoxicity.
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Amiloide , Amiloidose , Insulina , Amiloide/química , Amiloide/metabolismo , Proteínas Amiloidogênicas , Amiloidose/metabolismo , Humanos , Interações Hidrofóbicas e Hidrofílicas , Insulina/química , Insulina/metabolismoRESUMO
For in vivo two-photon fluorescence microscopy (2PM) imaging, the development of techniques that can improve the observable depth and temporal resolution is an important challenge to address biological and biomedical concerns such as vascular dynamics in the deep brain (typically the hippocampal region) of living animals. Improvements have been achieved through two approaches: an optical approach using a highly tissue-penetrating excitation laser oscillating in the second near-infrared wavelength region (NIR-II, 1100-1350 nm) and a chemical approach employing fluorescent probes with high two-photon brightness (characterized by the product of the two-photon absorption cross section, σ2, and the fluorescence quantum yield, Φ). To integrate these two approaches, we developed a fluorescent dye exhibiting a sufficiently high σ2Φ value of 68 Goeppert-Mayer units at 1100 nm. When a nanoemulsion encapsulating >1000 dye molecules per particle and a 1100 nm laser were employed for 2PM imaging, capillary blood vessels in almost the entire hippocampal CA1 region of the mouse brain (approximately 1.1-1.5 mm below the surface) were clearly visualized at a frame rate of 30 frames s-1 (averaged over eight frames, practically 3.75 frames s-1). This observable depth and frame rate are much higher than those in previous reports on 2PM imaging. Furthermore, this nanoemulsion allowed for the visualization of blood vessels at a depth of 1.8 mm, corresponding to the hippocampal dentate gyrus. These results highlight the advantage of combining bright probes with NIR-II lasers. Our probe is a promising tool for studying the vascular dynamics of living animals and related diseases.
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Região CA1 Hipocampal , Tomografia Computadorizada por Raios X , Animais , Corantes Fluorescentes/química , Camundongos , Microscopia de Fluorescência/métodos , Imagem Óptica , FótonsRESUMO
Herein, we discuss a new pyrene-based push-pull dye (PC) and our investigation of its photophysical properties and applicability to biological studies. The newly synthesized dye exhibits highly polarity-sensitive fluorescence over a significantly wide range (i.e., the green to far-red region), accompanied by high fluorescence quantum yields (ΦFL > 0.70 in most organic solvents) and superior photostability to that of the commonly used Nile Red (NR) dye, which also fluoresces in the green to red region. When human prostate cancer cells stained with PC were imaged using a confocal laser scanning fluorescence microscope, PC was found to selectively stain the lipid droplets. Under the cell conditions where the formation of droplets was inhibited, PC could be distributed to both the remaining droplets and the intercellular membranes, which could be distinguished based on the fluorescence solvatochromic function of PC. Furthermore, PC efficiently stained normal human skin tissue blocks treated with a transparency-enhancing agent and enabled clear visualization of individual cells in each tissue architecture by means of two-photon fluorescence microscopy (2PM). Interestingly, PC provides bright 2PM images under tissue-penetrative 960 nm excitation, realizing much clearer and deeper tissue imaging than conventional pyrene dyes and NR. These results suggest that PC could replace several commonly used dyes in various biological applications, particularly the rapid and accurate diagnosis of tissue diseases, typified by biopsy.
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Corantes Fluorescentes , Pirenos , Pele , Células HeLa , Humanos , Gotículas Lipídicas , Microscopia de Fluorescência/métodosRESUMO
Solvatochromic dyes have emerged as a new class of fluorescent probes in the field of lipid membranes due to their ability to identify the lipid organization of biomembranes in live cells by changing the colour of their fluorescence. This type of solvatochromic function is useful for studying the heterogeneous features of biomembranes caused by the uneven distribution of lipids and cholesterols in live cells and related cellular processes. Therefore, a variety of advanced solvatochromic dyes have been rapidly developed over the last decade. To provide an overview of the works recently developed solvatochromic dyes have enabled, we herein present some solvatochromic dyes, with a particular focus on those based on pyrene and Nile red. As these dyes exhibit preferable photophysical properties in terms of fluorescence microscopy applications and unique distribution/localization in cellular compartments, some have already found applications in cell biological and biophysical studies. The goal of this review is to provide information to researchers who have never used solvatochromic dyes or who have not discovered applications of such dyes in biological studies.
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Membrana Celular/metabolismo , Corantes Fluorescentes/química , Corantes Fluorescentes/metabolismo , Lipídeos de Membrana/metabolismo , Colesterol/metabolismo , Células HeLa , Humanos , Microdomínios da Membrana/metabolismo , Microscopia de Fluorescência/métodos , Estrutura Molecular , Imagem Óptica/métodos , Oxazinas/química , Oxazinas/metabolismo , Pirenos/química , Pirenos/metabolismo , Espectrometria de Fluorescência/métodosRESUMO
The push-pull solvatochromic pyrene derivatives PA and PK have been applied to the study of model membrane vesicles, cells and purified human serum lipoproteins, using both confocal fluorescence microscopy and fluorescence spectroscopy. These polarity-sensitive probes provide information similar to that obtained by Laurdan or Prodan, i.e. mainly lipid order in biomembranes, but they have the essential advantage of being excitable by a standard 405 nm laser light, bypassing the use of multiphoton excitation. In addition, they are brighter and much more photostable than those dimethylamino naphthalene derivatives. Our results with model membrane spectroscopy (multilamellar vesicles) and with microscopy (giant unilamellar vesicles) showed the capacity of PA and PK to report differently on liquid-disordered, liquid-ordered and gel phase bilayers. Moreover, a ratiometric parameter, the Red/Blue Intensity Ratio (RBIR) could be used for inter-domain, inter-vesicle and even inter-technique comparison, and the appropriate microscopy-spectroscopy conversion coefficients could be estimated. In studies at the cellular level, PA probe stained almost exclusively the plasma membrane of red blood cells, revealing its high degree of lipid order. Using Chinese Hamster Ovary cells PA was shown to be an excellent probe for the detection of cytoplasmic lipid droplets, superior to Nile Red in that PA provides simultaneously a detailed information of membrane order in the whole cell, in which the lipid droplets appear with a very good contrast. Moreover, spectrofluorometric data of PA-stained serum lipoproteins indicated an essentially identical value of RBIR for lipid droplets and for high-density lipoproteins.
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Membrana Eritrocítica , Corantes Fluorescentes , Gotículas Lipídicas , Lipoproteínas , Pirenos , Coloração e Rotulagem , Animais , Células CHO , Cricetulus , Membrana Eritrocítica/química , Membrana Eritrocítica/metabolismo , Corantes Fluorescentes/química , Corantes Fluorescentes/farmacologia , Humanos , Gotículas Lipídicas/química , Gotículas Lipídicas/metabolismo , Lipoproteínas/química , Lipoproteínas/farmacologia , Microscopia de Fluorescência , Pirenos/química , Pirenos/farmacologiaRESUMO
Two-photon, excitation fluorescent microscopy featuring autofluorescence or immunofluorescence, combined with optical clearance using a transparency-enhancing technique, allows deep imaging of three-dimensional (3D) skin structures. However, it remains difficult to obtain high-quality images of individual cells or 3D structures. We combined a new dye with a transparency-enhancing technology and performed high-quality structural analysis of human epidermal structures, especially the acrosyringium. Human fingertip skin samples were collected, formalin-fixed, embedded in both frozen and paraffin blocks, sliced, stained with propidium iodide, optically cleared using a transparency-enhancing technique, and stained with a new fluorescent, solvatochromic pyrene probe. Microscopy revealed fine skin features and detailed epidermal structures including the stratum corneum (horny layer), keratinocytes, eccrine sweat glands, and peripheral nerves. Three-dimensional reconstruction of an entire acrosyringium was possible in one sample. This new fluorescence microscopy technique yields high-quality epidermal images and will aid in histopathological analyses of skin disorders.
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Since mitochondrial dysfunction was discovered to be the underlying cause of several severe diseases, fluorescent probes with excellent optical properties for visualising and monitoring the mitochondrial membrane potential (MMP) (a parameter of mitochondrial vitality) have been in high demand. Herein, we present novel pyrene-based dyes exhibiting remarkably large two-photon absorption around 900 nm and bright red emission around 620 nm (two-photon brightness (Φσ2) = 425-525 GM), with selective localisation to the mitochondria or nucleus in response to changes in the MMP, providing several advantages over traditional MMP-monitoring probes such as Rhodamine 123 (Φσ2 = 64 GM). The intracellular behavior of the new dyes was investigated in detail. The driving forces for the dyes to dissociate from the mitochondria and migrate toward the nucleus upon decreasing the MMP were two key molecular characteristics: the dyes' permeability to mitochondrial membranes and their affinity to nuclear DNA. The results provide significant insights into improving the molecular design of the dyes.
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Imaging lipid organization in cell membranes requires advanced fluorescent probes. Here, we show that a recently synthesized push-pull pyrene (PA), similarly to popular probe Laurdan, changes the emission maximum as a function of lipid order, but outperforms it by spectroscopic properties. In addition to red-shifted absorption compatible with common 405 nm diode laser, PA shows higher brightness and much higher photostability than Laurdan in apolar membrane environments. Moreover, PA is compatible with two-photon excitation at wavelengths >800 nm, which was successfully used for ratiometric imaging of coexisting liquid ordered and disordered phases in giant unilamellar vesicles. Fluorescence confocal microscopy in Hela cells revealed that PA efficiently stains the plasma membrane and the intracellular membranes at >20-fold lower concentrations, as compared to Laurdan. Finally, ratiometric imaging using PA reveals variation of lipid order within different cellular compartments: plasma membranes are close to liquid ordered phase of model membranes composed of sphingomyelin and cholesterol, while intracellular membranes are much less ordered, matching well membranes composed of unsaturated phospholipids without cholesterol. These differences in the lipid order were confirmed by fluorescence lifetime imaging (FLIM) at the blue edge of PA emission band. PA probe constitutes thus a new powerful tool for biomembrane research.