Alexey N Butkevich1,2, Mariano L Bossi2, Gražvydas Lukinavičius1, Stefan W Hell1,2. 1. Department of NanoBiophotonics , Max Planck Institute for Biophysical Chemistry , Am Fassberg 11 , 37077 Göttingen , Germany. 2. Department of Optical Nanoscopy , Max Planck Institute for Medical Research , Jahnstrasse 29 , 69120 Heidelberg , Germany.
Abstract
Spectral stability of small-molecule fluorescent probes is required for correct interpretation and reproducibility of multicolor fluorescence imaging data, in particular under high (de)excitation light intensities of super-resolution imaging or in single-molecule applications. We propose a synthetic approach to a series of spectrally stable rhodamine fluorophores based on sequential Ru- and Cu-catalyzed transformations, evaluate their stability against photobleaching and photoconversion in the context of other fluorophores using chemometric analysis, and demonstrate chemical reactivity of fluorophore photoproducts. The substitution patterns providing the photoconversion-resistant triarylmethane fluorophores have been identified, and the applicability of nonbluing labels in live-cell STED nanoscopy is demonstrated.
Spectral stability of small-molecule fluorescent probes is required for correct interpretation and reproducibility of multicolor fluorescence imaging data, in particular under high (de)excitation light intensities of super-resolution imaging or in single-molecule applications. We propose a synthetic approach to a series of spectrally stable rhodamine fluorophores based on sequential Ru- and Cu-catalyzed transformations, evaluate their stability against photobleaching and photoconversion in the context of other fluorophores using chemometric analysis, and demonstrate chemical reactivity of fluorophore photoproducts. The substitution patterns providing the photoconversion-resistant triarylmethane fluorophores have been identified, and the applicability of nonbluing labels in live-cell STED nanoscopy is demonstrated.
With the recent developments
of fluorescence nanoscopy (super-resolution
microscopy) methods,[1] it has now become
possible to observe and study nanoscale stn class="Chemical">ructures on the cell surface[2] and within the cell interior[3] with the help of advanced optical microscopes. The observation
of real-time interactions between individual (labeled) biomolecules
in living cells and tissues over extended periods of time is of particular
value to life sciences.[4] For simultaneous
selective detection and localization of multiple distinct light-emitting
species using optical techniques, clear differentiation of their photophysical
or photochemical behavior is prerequisite. The most straightforward
approach, multiplexing by excitation or emission wavelength, permits
encoding multiple colors in fluorescence nanoscopy using suitable
fluorophores. It is, however, limited by the intrinsically broad nature
of excitation and emission spectra of most common fluorophores (around
50 nm at half-maximum). Even under these constraints, we have recently
realized three-color STED nanoscopy in living cells using fluorescent
labels with well separated excitation and emission maxima (Δλmax ≥ 60 nm) with a commercial microscope.[5] Using a custom hyperspectral detection setup
and labels with overlapping absorption and emission spectra (Δλmax ∼ 30 nm), super-resolution STED imaging with four
color channels was made possible.[6]
Sophisticated color separation techniques in fluorescence microscopy,
such as spectrally resolved fluorescence lifetime imaging,[7] and signal procesn class="Chemical">sing methods including spectral
unmixing, deconvolution, and demodulation,[8] rely heavily on the spectral stability of the employed fluorescent
labels. However, all organic fluorophores to different extents are
prone to the detrimental processes of photobluing or photoredding
(i.e., hypso- or bathochromic shift, respectively, of excitation and
fluorescence emission maxima of fluorophore photoproducts) as well
as blinking[9] (transient conversion into
nonemissive states or species) and photobleaching[10] (irreversible degradation of the fluorophore). These processes
are particularly consequential in the presence of oxidizing (dissolved
oxygen) and reducing species (glutathione and nicotinamide adenine
dinucleotide phosphate), which are naturally abundant in eukaryotic
cells.[11] While blinking and bleaching typically
result in the loss of signal intensity and resolution in fluorescence
nanoscopy methods, spectral instability of fluorescent markers (their
bluing or redding) will lead to misidentification of individual labels
and obfuscation of the resulting multicolor data due to inconsistent
crosstalk levels between the excitation or detection channels. Spectral
stability of labels under demanding conditions of fluorescence nanoscopy
(high intensities of excitation or de-excitation light), particularly
in live samples where the concentration levels of molecular oxygen
cannot be controlled, is therefore essential for the integrity of
the collected multicolor data.
While fluorophore brightness[12] and its
resistance against photobleaching[13] with
regard to cell imaging applications have been addressed in several
reports, no studies so far have specifically fon class="Chemical">cused on the problem
of spectral instability of fluorescent labels. In the present work,
we quantify the prevalence of the photobluing phenomenon and propose
possible solutions pertaining to development of widely used triarylmethane
fluorophores.
Stepwise photooxidative N-dealkylation
of n class="Chemical">rhodamines,
leading to hypsochromic shifts of their absorption and emission maxima
(10–15 nm per single dealkylation step), has been known for
over 40 years.[14] Similar processes have
been reported for other triarylmethane dyes[15] and 7-(dialkylamino)coumarins.[16] The
oxidative dealkylation of tertiary amines proceeds through the initial
formation of a radical cation, which is deprotonated to form an α-aminoalkyl
radical. In oxygen-containing media, the latter loses an alkyl substituent
in the form of an aldehyde through the intermediacy of a hemiaminal,
peroxyhemiaminal, or iminium-type species (assuming for simplicity
the absence of other oxidants; Figure a). Similar reactivity was observed upon electrochemical[17] or photocatalytic[18] oxidation of tertiary amines. Formation of chemically stable photoredding
products is much more uncommon; however photooxidation of an N,N-diethylamino substituent into the corresponding N-ethylacetamide imposing a spectral red shift has been
demonstrated for a trioxatriangulenium dye.[19] On the contrary, similar α-oxidation of the dialkylamine fragment
of coumarin 153 resulted in regioisomeric amide photoproducts with
blue-shifted absorption maxima.[20]
Figure 1
(a) General
oxidative photobluing pathway for fluorescent dyes
with (di)alkylamino auxochromic groups. (b) Strategies aimed at suppression
of transitioning into the twisted intramolecular charge transfer (TICT)
excited state for select classes of fluorophores; NBD – 4-nitro-2,1,3-benzoxadiazole.
(c) Possible approaches to mitigate the dye photobluing unrelated
to TICT suppression. Question marks denote the steps with possible
participation of other redox partners.
(a) General
oxidative photobluing pathway for fluorescent dyes
with (di)alkylamino auxochromic groups. (b) Strategies aimed at suppresn class="Chemical">sion
of transitioning into the twisted intramolecular charge transfer (TICT)
excited state for select classes of fluorophores; NBD – 4-nitro-2,1,3-benzoxadiazole.
(c) Possible approaches to mitigate the dye photobluing unrelated
to TICT suppression. Question marks denote the steps with possible
participation of other redox partners.
Related to the oxidative photodealkylation process described
above
is the trann class="Chemical">sition of a fluorophore into a twisted intramolecular charge
transfer (TICT) excited state, which in the case of triarylmethane
dyes corresponds to an internal electron transfer from a (di)alkylamino
substituent to the xanthylium core. As the ensuing amine radical cation
can undergo similar N-dealkylation, the suppression
of the TICT pathway, besides the improved photostability and fluorescence
quantum yield, will also reduce photobluing. This approach was first
introduced by Foley[21] and later developed
by Lavis[12b] and Liu and Xu[22] who proposed, respectively, to substitute the freely rotating N,N-dialkylamino groups in rhodamine-type
fluorophores with bridged 7-azabicyclo[2.2.1]heptane, azetidine, or
aziridine substituents (Figure b).
Other than TICT suppression, it is evident from
the mechanism of
oxidative photoden class="Chemical">alkylation (Figure a) that hindering either the first (one-electron photooxidation,
step i) or the second step (α-deprotonation of the radical cation,
step ii) of the oxidative cycle should prevent fluorophore photobluing
(Figure c). The former
can, in principle, be achieved with the introduction of electron-withdrawing
groups, such as 2,2,2-trifluoroethyl, as amine substituents. Indeed,
many fluorinated rhodamines[23] and carborhodamines[24] have already been employed as photostable labels
for live and fixed-cell STED imaging. The most straightforward way
to avoid α-deprotonation in step ii would be to introduce tert-alkyl substituents lacking α-hydrogen atoms,
which is the approach of the present work.
Results and Discussion
Synthesis
and Characterization of N,N′-Di-tert-alkylrhodamines
To evaluate the
photobluing resistance of N,N′-di-n class="Chemical">tert-alkylrhodamines, we had
first to address the problem of their synthetic accessibility. The
shortest approach to symmetric triarylmethane dyes offering the highest N-substituent diversity has so far been the double Buchwald–Hartwig
amination of fluorescein ditriflates, proposed by Grimm and Lavis.[25] These triflates, however, are rather poor substrates
for amination, as can be seen from the necessity of using high catalyst
loads (typically 20 mol % of Pd source and 30 mol % of mono- or bis-phosphine
ligand) and Cs2CO3 base to achieve satisfactory
preparative yields. To highlight these difficulties, and despite the
fact that in recent years several highly active catalytic systems
have been proposed specifically for Pd- and Ni-catalyzed arylation
of hindered primary amines[26] and base-sensitive
substrates,[27] in our test reactions we
have failed to obtain the coupling product between fluorescein ditriflate
and tert-butylamine (2a) with acceptable
yield (see Table S1). Instead, net hydrolysis
of the triflate was invariably the overwhelming pathway.
This
setback led us to consider the Ullmann reaction as a posn class="Chemical">sible alternative
for the synthesis of N,N′-di-tert-alkylrhodamines. The copper-catalyzed amination
of aryl halides has the advantage of operating along a different mechanistic
pathway, being more tolerant to the nature of solvent and substrate
than Pd- and Ni-catalyzed coupling reactions, and employing an abundant
metal and usually inexpensive ligands.[28] Aryl sulfonates, however, are known to be unsuitable partners for
Ullmann-type reactions, as a halide leaving group, preferably a bromide
or iodide, is required. We had therefore to meet a twofold challenge
of securing access to diversely substituted 3′,6′-dihalofluorans
and realizing a double Ullmann amination on these substrates with
primary or secondary tert-alkylamines.
Gratifyingly,
the required transformation of aryl triflates to
n class="Chemical">aryl bromides or iodides has been reported,[29] and with minor modifications, we found it perfectly suitable for
the transformation of fluorescein, carbo- and silicofluorescein ditriflates,
and rhodol triflates to the corresponding halofluorans (Figure ). The originally employed
cationic Ru(II) catalyst [Cp*Ru(MeCN)3]OTf could in many
cases be replaced with a less expensive Ru(III) precatalyst[30] [Cp*RuCl2]. On the contrary, the corresponding Rh(III) complex [Cp*Rh(MeCN)3](SbF6)2 was found to be completely
ineffective (Table S2), and Grushin’s
catalyst[31] [Cp*Ru(η6-C10H8)]BF4, presumably operating through
a nucleophilic substitution in a η6-coordinated Ru(II)-arene
π-complex,[32] was much less active.
The hygroscopic LiBr and NaI salts were substituted with Bu4NBr and Bu4NI, which allowed the reaction to be set up
in open air.
Figure 2
Ru-catalyzed synthesis of 3′,6′-dihalofluorans:
(a)
with 10 mol % [Ru]; (b) with 5 mol % [Cp*RuCl2]; (c) with 10 mol % [Ru], reaction time 38 h; (d)
with 10 mol % [Cp*RuCl2];
(e) at 120 °C, reaction time 16 h; (f) LiBr was used instead
of Bu4NBr. DMI – 1,3-dimethyl-2-imidazolidinone.
The yields in parentheses correspond to the acid-mediated condensation
between the corresponding phthalic anhydride and 3-halophenol (neat
methanesulfonic acid, 140–150 °C, 20–40 h).
Ru-catalyzed synthesis of 3′,6′-dihalofluorans:
(a)
with 10 mol % [Ru]; (b) with 5 mol % [Cp*RuCl2]; (c) with 10 mol % [Ru], reaction time 38 h; (d)
with 10 mol % [Cp*RuCl2];
(e) at 120 °C, reaction time 16 h; (f) LiBr was used instead
of Bu4NBr. DMI – 1,3-dimethyl-2-imidazolidinone.
The yields in parentheses correspond to the acid-mediated condensation
between the corresponding phthalic anhydride and 3-halophenol (neat
methanesulfonic acid, 140–150 °C, 20–40 h).Besides n class="Chemical">fluorescein triflates,
the corresponding fluorosulfonates
and nonaflates (less reactive) could be employed as the starting materials.
Other more electron-rich sulfonates (fluorescein dimesylate and ditosylate)
did not participate in the transformation, resulting in nearly complete
recovery of the starting material. Ortho-substituted or otherwise
sterically hindered aryl triflates were well tolerated but required
longer reaction times and/or higher catalyst loads (see Figure and SI), and no halide scrambling was observed with F- or Cl-substituted
(but not with Br-substituted) 3′,6′-diiodofluoran. It
is worth noting that the mild reaction conditions and broad substrate
tolerance of the Ru-catalyzed synthesis of 3′,6′-dihalofluorans
are particularly evident when compared to the classic condensation
of 3-halophenols with phthalic anhydride in neat strong acid (see
the SI). As a result, only a few simple
halofluorans, and none of their group 14 atom-bridged analogues, have
been previously accessed.
In a recent work by Zhu and Wan,[33] an
Ullmann-type amination of aryl bromides and n class="Chemical">iodides with secondary
and primary amines, including 1-aminoadamantane, under exceptionally
mild conditions (5 mol % of Cu catalyst, K3PO4 base in diethylene glycol, rt to 60 °C) has been reported.
Employing this catalytic system, upon optimization (Table S3) we were able to achieve double amination with primary N-tert-alkylamines on a diverse variety
of 3′,6′-dibromo- and 3′,6′-diiodofluorans
prepared as described above (Figure ). Under high catalyst loads (40 mol % L1, 80 mol % CuI) and with mild heating (80 °C), it was possible
to suppress the side reactions (mainly Cu-catalyzed solvolysis of
aryl halides) and reach practicable preparative yields. Both an alcohol
solvent (2-methoxyethanol was preferred over diethylene glycol owing
to its lower boiling point) and the use of a bidentate ligand with
a pyrrole-type nitrogen in the 2-position to a carbohydrazide or carbohydroxamate
moiety were required (Table S3). Multiple
unprotected hydroxyl groups in the amine substituent were well tolerated
if aryl iodides were used as the coupling partners. However, further
increasing the steric bulk of tert-alkylamines (in
the cases of 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine, 2-(tert-butylamino)ethanol, or tritylamine) completely shut down their reactivity.
Figure 3
Synthesis
of N,N′-di-tert-alkylrhodamines by Ullmann-type amination of 3′,6′-dihalofluorans:
(a) 66% yield with 20 mol % CuI and 20 mol % L1; (b)
at 50 °C, reaction time 68 h; (c) at 50 °C, reaction time
63 h; (d) reaction time 40 h.
Synthesis
of N,N′-di-tert-alkylrhodamines by Ullmann-type amination of 3′,6′-dihalofluorans:
(a) 66% yield with 20 mol % CuI and 20 mol % L1; (b)
at 50 °C, reaction time 68 h; (c) at 50 °C, reaction time
63 h; (d) reaction time 40 h.The photophysical properties of N,N′-di-n class="Chemical">tert-alkylrhodamines are compiled
in Table S4. For comparative evaluation
of photostability
and brightness of the new fluorophores, a series of reference rhodamine
dyes (TMR, JF525, JF549, 3a–d) have also been prepared (Table S5). We found that N,N′-di-tert-alkylrhodamines are generally bright fluorophores (ε
∼ 1 × 105 M–1 cm–1, fluorescence quantum yields >90%) with excited-state lifetimes
of up to 4 ns and are spectrally similar to N,N′-dialkylrhodamines such as 520R[24a] or Rhodamine 6G. Unlike the latter, the dyes 2b–d, bearing substituents ortho to the amino groups,
manifest significantly lower quantum yields.
Photophysical Properties
and Photooxidative Degradation of Rhodamine
Fluorophores
With the demonstrated robustness of the proposed
synthetic approach, we moved on to evaluate the photostability of N,N′-di-tert-alkyln class="Chemical">rhodamines
in relation to other known rhodamine fluorophores (3a,b, TMR, Rhodamines 110, B, 6G and relevant Janelia
Fluor dyes). Our intent was to compare the relative photobleaching
and photobluing rates for different substitution patterns. To this
end, dilute (∼10 μM) solutions of the tested fluorophores
in air-saturated acidified ethanol (with 0.1 v/v% TFA) were continuously
irradiated (see the SI) with intermittent
recording of absorption spectra (Figure ). The resulting kinetic data were passed
to an iterative fitting procedure[34] calculating
the quantum yields of the individual photoprocesses according to a
simplified general mechanism including up to two consecutive photobluing
steps (Table ). To
ensure the correct interpretation of the spectroscopic data and identification
of the photoproducts, a series of photolyses have been performed on
a semipreparative scale (∼50 μmol) in a custom-built
flow photoreactor (Figures S2–S22), and the photoproducts were unambiguously identified by (HR-)MS,
NMR, and UV–vis spectrometry (Tables S6–S12).
Figure 4
Time-resolved absorption spectroscopy experiment demonstrating
photolysis of (a) a photooxidation-resistant, nonbluing fluorophore 2a in comparison with (b) a photooxidation-prone fluorophore 2h in 0.1% (v/v) TFA–ethanol. The insets show the absorption
transients at the absorption λmax of 531 nm (a) and
531, 520, and 510 nm (b), corresponding to the absorption maxima of
the starting materials and photoproducts. OD = optical density of
solution at a given wavelength λ, optical path l = 1 cm.
Table 1
Photobleaching and
Photobluing Quantum
Yields for a Series of Nonbluing vs Bluing Rhodamine Fluorophores*
Simplified
scheme of the two-step oxidative photobluing
of a rhodamine fluorophore (assuming either R1 = R2, R2 = H, or much higher photooxidation rate for
R1 substituent; for more complex cases, see SI) with concomitant photobleaching. Φ denotes a calculated quantum yield for the corresponding
photochemical process based on the optimized absorption spectra matrix
fit (see SI). The fluorophores within each
group are listed from highest to lowest photostability (increasing Φblue1 + Φbleach1).
n.o.: not observed
within the
time frame of the experiment.
Complex mechanism with accumulation
of multiple products; the data were fitted at low photoconversion
(ca. < 15%), where photobleaching was the main observed process.
Time-resolved absorption spectroscopy experiment demonstrating
photolysis of (a) a photooxidation-ren class="Chemical">sistant, nonbluing fluorophore 2a in comparison with (b) a photooxidation-prone fluorophore 2h in 0.1% (v/v) TFA–ethanol. The insets show the absorption
transients at the absorption λmax of 531 nm (a) and
531, 520, and 510 nm (b), corresponding to the absorption maxima of
the starting materials and photoproducts. OD = optical density of
solution at a given wavelength λ, optical path l = 1 cm.
Simplified
scheme of the two-step oxidative photobluing
of a rhodamine fluorophore (assuming either R1 = R2, R2 = H, or much higher photooxidation rate for
R1 substituent; for more complex cases, see SI) with concomitant photobleaching. Φ denotes a calculated quantum yield for the corresponding
photochemical process based on the optimized absorption spectra matrix
fit (see SI). The fluorophores within each
group are listed from highest to lowest photostability (increasing Φblue1 + Φbleach1).n.o.: not observed
within the
time frame of the experiment.Complex mechanism with accumulation
of multiple products; the data were fitted at low photoconversion
(ca. < 15%), where photobleaching was the main observed process.The results of a sample analysis
of the photobluing/photobleaching
kinetics are shown in Figure . As is evident from the data in Table , and according to our expectations, the
n class="Chemical">rhodamine fluorophores bearing a tert-alkyl substituent
did not manifest appreciable photooxidative bluing effects. Rhodamine
110 showed similar spectral stability, and Foley’s azabicycloheptane-substituted
fluorophore 3c and its hydrophilized analog 3d were also resistant. On the contrary, most tetra- or N,N′-disubstituted rhodamines underwent dealkylative
photooxidation with efficiencies comparable to those of the photobleaching
process. In all cases, the isolated major intermediates in these photoreactions
corresponded to the products of stepwise N-dealkylation
(Figure ,a). These
photoproducts were characterized whenever possible (Tables S6–S12); for example, we separated all five
dealkylation products of Rhodamine B. In an experiment with exhaustive
photodealkylation of Rhodamine B to Rhodamine 110 (corresponding to
∼50 nm hypsochromic shifts of absorption and emission maxima),
a minor N-substituent oxidation byproduct was identified
as N-acetylrhodamine 110 (see Figure a, step v′).
Figure 5
Photodegradation kinetics
of 2h simulated with the
two-step photobluing model (model D, Scheme S3). (a) Experimental 2D data AEXP(λ,t); (b) fitted 2D data Afit(λ,t); (c) residuals map AEXP(λ,t) – Afit(λ,t); (d) concentration profiles, assuming ε(λmax) = 9 × 104 M–1 cm–1 for all components, calculated from experimental
(dots, C = AEXP × ET) and fitted data (lines, C = Afit × ET); (e) the resulting fitted absorption spectra matrix E. The corresponding fitted quantum yields for individual
photoconversion processes are given in Table ; dps, dark products.
Photodegradation kinetics
of 2hn class="Chemical">simulated with the
two-step photobluing model (model D, Scheme S3). (a) Experimental 2D data AEXP(λ,t); (b) fitted 2D data Afit(λ,t); (c) residuals map AEXP(λ,t) – Afit(λ,t); (d) concentration profiles, assuming ε(λmax) = 9 × 104 M–1 cm–1 for all components, calculated from experimental
(dots, C = AEXP × ET) and fitted data (lines, C = Afit × ET); (e) the resulting fitted absorption spectra matrix E. The corresponding fitted quantum yields for individual
photoconversion processes are given in Table ; dps, dark products.
For 3b, a hemiaminal ether 3b-4 (Tables S11 and S12), arising from the
trapping
of a reactive trifluoroacetaldimmonium intermediate with the solvent,
was also isolated; however, as we expected, the methyl and not the
trifluoroethyl groups were predominantly subject to the oxidative
cleavage (Figure c).
It is also worth noting that, in most cases, when the photobluing
pathway is open, the photooxidation of N-substituents
is of comparable or higher efficiency to the destructive photobleaching
(see the values Φblue1/Φbleach1 >
1 in Table ). The
introduction of 2,2,2-trifluoroethyl substituents in 3b (and fluorination of the azetidine substituents in JF525) suppresses this relative predominance of photobluing (Φblue1/Φbleach1 < 1).The presence
of hydroxyl groups[24b] in
the β-positions of n class="Chemical">tert-alkyl substituents
led to a pronounced increase in substituent photooxidation, resulting
in the rapidly bluing dye 2h and implying the fragmentation
of the ensuing radical cation (Figure a, step ii) with the loss of formaldehyde. The hydroxylated
analogues 2i,j were considerably more
resistant, likely due to additive –I effects
of multiple β-hydroxy substituents. More remote hydroxylation
(in bridged cycles) was well tolerated, resulting in highly photo-
and spectrally stable fluorophores 2g and 3d.
Photobluing fluorophores derived from cyclic secondary amines,
such as JF525[35] and n class="CellLine">JF549,[12b] represented a particular case. Photooxidative
opening of azetidine substituents in JF549 must have proceeded
via a highly reactive 1-azetinium intermediate, which (similarly to 3b) then reacted with the nucleophilic solvent with formation
of 2-ethoxyazetidine and finally 3-aminopropionaldehydediethyl acetal
products. Only the acetal products were sufficiently stable for identification
in the mixture by LC–MS, yet upon attempted isolation they
underwent extensive self-condensation. The formation of masked aldehyde
was confirmed by trapping all three possible diethyl acetal photoproducts
upon treatment with excess 2,4-dinitrophenylhydrazine (Table S13). Under identical conditions, the dye
JF525 underwent quick and complex degradation explicable
by much higher electrophilic reactivity of 2,2-difluoropropionaldehyde
derivatives.
The electrophilic reactivity of the oxidative photobluing
products
of triarylmethane fluorophores may be of consequence for the long-term
microscopy in live cells, as the reactive n class="Chemical">aldehyde species derived
from fluorescent probes will contribute to unwanted and unexpected
cross-reactivity with biomolecules. For instance, an off-target covalent
labeling and intramolecular cross-linking of tagged proteins is to
be anticipated. As an illustrative example, the dilute solutions of
bluing and nonbluing rhodamine fluorophores were briefly irradiated
in air-saturated aqueous phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) followed
by incubation with bovineserum albumin in the dark. The SDS-PAGE
analysis (Figure )
of irradiated vs nonirradiated samples clearly showed that the bluing
fluorophores forming reactive oxidation products (JF dyes and 3b) were predisposed to formation of covalent fluorescent
dye-protein adducts.
Figure 6
Quantification of nonspecific protein labeling with the
fluorophore
photooxidation products. (a) Solutions of fluorophores (10 μM
in 0.1% (v/v) DMSO–PBS, pH 7.4, air-saturated) were irradiated
with 525 nm LED array (300 W) at 30 °C in flow (residence time
5.1 min) followed by incubation with 1 mg/mL bovine serum albumin
(BSA) in the dark (25 °C, 18 h). In control experiments, no irradiation
was performed. The incubated samples were analyzed under denaturing
contitions (SDS-PAGE), and the in-gel fluorescence was measured (Figure S32). Data points are presented as mean
with standard deviation (N = 3). (b, c) Sample gel
images with nonbluing (b) and bluing (c) fluorophores; – and
+ denote nonirradiated and irradiated dye samples, respectively.
Quantification of nonspecific protein labeling with the
fluorophore
photooxidation products. (a) Solutions of fluorophores (10 μM
in 0.1% (v/v) DMSO–n class="Chemical">PBS, pH 7.4, air-saturated) were irradiated
with 525 nm LED array (300 W) at 30 °C in flow (residence time
5.1 min) followed by incubation with 1 mg/mL bovineserum albumin
(BSA) in the dark (25 °C, 18 h). In control experiments, no irradiation
was performed. The incubated samples were analyzed under denaturing
contitions (SDS-PAGE), and the in-gel fluorescence was measured (Figure S32). Data points are presented as mean
with standard deviation (N = 3). (b, c) Sample gel
images with nonbluing (b) and bluing (c) fluorophores; – and
+ denote nonirradiated and irradiated dye samples, respectively.
Sample Imaging Results
with Nonbluing Fluorophores
To demonstrate the suitability
of the newly introduced nonbluing
analogues of triarylmethane fluorescent dyes for live-cell super-resolution
imaging, we prepared the dyes 4a,b as analogues
of the validated live cell labels 520R[24a] and n class="Chemical">silico-rhodamine (SiR).[36] These were
then converted to the cell-permeant self-labeling HaloTag ligands 4a,b-Halo (Figure ). The 4a-Halo probe, although not compatible
with 775 nm de-excitation, selectively stained the vimentin intermediate
filaments in two-color confocal imaging of living humanU2OS cells
endogeneously expressing Vimentin-HaloTag fusion protein[37] and cotreated with SiR-Hoechst.[38] The spectrally stable SiR analog 4b-Halo demonstrated
similar image quality to SiR-Halo[36] in
terms of target selectivity, contrast, background, and resolution
in 775 nm live-cell STED nanoscopy.
Figure 7
Images of living U2OS cells with stable
expression of HaloTag-vimentin
fusion protein stained with the indicated HaloTag fluorescent ligands.
(a) STED image of living U2OS cells stained with 1 μM SiR-Halo[36] in Dulbecco’s modified Eagle’s
medium (DMEM) at 37 °C for 1 h. (b) STED image of living U2OS
cells stained with 1 μM 4b-Halo in DMEM at 37 °C
for 1 h. (c) Confocal and STED intensity profiles of the image shown
in (b) panel at the positions indicated by the dotted line. (d) Confocal
image of living U2OS cells stained with 1 μM 4a-Halo and SiR-Hoechst[38] in DMEM at 37 °C
for 1 h. (e) Chemical structures of the HaloTag ligands. In all cases,
cells were washed once with Hank’s balanced salt solution before
imaging in DMEM; scale bars 5 μm.
Images of living U2OS cells with stable
expresn class="Chemical">sion of HaloTag-vimentin
fusion protein stained with the indicated HaloTag fluorescent ligands.
(a) STED image of living U2OS cells stained with 1 μM SiR-Halo[36] in Dulbecco’s modified Eagle’s
medium (DMEM) at 37 °C for 1 h. (b) STED image of living U2OS
cells stained with 1 μM 4b-Halo in DMEM at 37 °C
for 1 h. (c) Confocal and STED intensity profiles of the image shown
in (b) panel at the positions indicated by the dotted line. (d) Confocal
image of living U2OS cells stained with 1 μM 4a-Halo and SiR-Hoechst[38] in DMEM at 37 °C
for 1 h. (e) Chemical structures of the HaloTag ligands. In all cases,
cells were washed once with Hank’s balanced salt solution before
imaging in DMEM; scale bars 5 μm.
Conclusion
Photoconversion of widely used n class="Chemical">triarylmethane
fluorophores results
in a series of photooxidative transformations. The photooxidation
products demonstrate hypsochromic absorption and emission shifts and
are accumulated with rates intrinsically dependent on the N-substitution pattern of a given fluorophore. Moreover,
the photostability of the photoconversion intermediates also varies
on a case-by-case basis. As the spectral stability of fluorescent
labels is critical to identification and tracking of the observed
objects in multicolor super-resolution and, in particular, in single-molecule
imaging, choosing the nonbluing fluorescent labels will be essential
for the robustness of data analysis, integrity, and reproducibility
in such applications. Of particular note is the demonstrated generation
of chemically reactive species upon photooxidation of rhodamine labels
with cyclic dialkylamino substituents. Under live-cell imaging conditions,
these photoproducts may form covalent fluorescent adducts with off-target
biomolecules and, therefore, alter the expected selectivity of employed
fluorescent ligands.
Using the sequential n class="Chemical">Ru- and Cu-catalyzed
transformations, we have
prepared a series of nonbluing N,N′-di-tert-alkylrhodamine fluorophores with
diverse substitution patterns and validated them as intact cell membrane-permeant
labels. Besides tert-alkylamino groups, we have identified
unsubstituted amino, (2,2,2-trifluoroethyl)amino, and 7-azabicyclo[2.2.1]heptyl
auxochromic substituents as providing the spectrally stable triarylmethane
fluorophores. Along with the proper choice of the bridging group (O,
CMe2, SiMe2), these substitution options will
allow for sufficient spectral diversity of the fluorophores and, by
extension, can be recommended for future development of other types
of fluorescent labels for demanding multicolor bioimaging applications.
Authors: Gyuzel Yu Mitronova; Vladimir N Belov; Mariano L Bossi; Christian A Wurm; Lars Meyer; Rebecca Medda; Gael Moneron; Stefan Bretschneider; Christian Eggeling; Stefan Jakobs; Stefan W Hell Journal: Chemistry Date: 2010-03-22 Impact factor: 5.236
Authors: Monica A Gonzalez; Alison S Walker; Kevin J Cao; Julia R Lazzari-Dean; Nicholas S Settineri; Eui Ju Kong; Richard H Kramer; Evan W Miller Journal: J Am Chem Soc Date: 2021-01-27 Impact factor: 15.419
Authors: Jonathan B Grimm; Liangqi Xie; Jason C Casler; Ronak Patel; Ariana N Tkachuk; Natalie Falco; Heejun Choi; Jennifer Lippincott-Schwartz; Timothy A Brown; Benjamin S Glick; Zhe Liu; Luke D Lavis Journal: JACS Au Date: 2021-04-23
Authors: Qinsi Zheng; Anthony X Ayala; Inhee Chung; Aubrey V Weigel; Anand Ranjan; Natalie Falco; Jonathan B Grimm; Ariana N Tkachuk; Carl Wu; Jennifer Lippincott-Schwartz; Robert H Singer; Luke D Lavis Journal: ACS Cent Sci Date: 2019-09-05 Impact factor: 14.553