| Literature DB >> 31530869 |
Aleksey Yu Vorob'ev1,2, Tatyana Yu Dranova2,3, Alexander E Moskalensky4,5.
Abstract
Carboxylic acids conjugated with 4,5-dimethoxy-2-nitrobenzyl photoremovable protecting group are well known and widely used for biological studies. In this paper, we study the photolysis of likewise "caged" acetic, caprylic and arachidonic acids. Unexpectedly, we observed huge growth of fluorescence emission at ~430 nm during photolysis. Following further UV irradiation, a product with fluorescence at longer wavelength was formed (470 nm excitation / ~500-600 nm emission). While it may be used to monitor the "uncaging", these fluorescent products may interfere with widespread dyes such as fluorescein in biomedical experiments. This effect might be negligible if the photolysis products dissolve in the medium. On the other hand, we observed that arachidonic and caprylic acids derivatives self-organize in emulsion droplets in water environment due to long lipophilic chains. Illumination of droplets by UV rapidly induces orange fluorescence excited by 488 nm light. This fluorescence turn-on was fast (~0.1 s) and apparently caused by the accumulation of water-insoluble fluorescent residuals inside droplets. These self-organized lipophilic structures with fluorescence turn-on capability may be of interest for biomedical and other application. We have identified and hypothesized some compounds which may be responsible for the observed fluorescense.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31530869 PMCID: PMC6748988 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-49845-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1“Caged” compounds which were synthesized and used for experiments.
Figure 2Presumable primary products of photolysis of I-III and analogous compounds: the “uncaged” carboxylic acid and 2-nitroso-4,5-dimethoxybenzaldehyde IV.
Figure 3(A) Changes in an absorption spectra of “caged” acetic acid Ia in DMSO during UV illumination. (B) Fluorescence emission spectra of the same sample (excitation: 355 nm). (C) Fluorescence emission spectra of the same sample (excitation: 470 nm) and 25 nM of FITC for the comparison. Insets: time dependence of maximal value.
Figure 4(A) Time dependence of fluorescence intensity at 430 nm (excitation: 355 nm) of I-III solution in DMSO following UV illumination. (B) Same samples, fluorescence excitation: 470 nm, emission 550 nm.
Figure 5(A–D) Fluorescence images of emulsion (excitation: 450–490 nm; emission: >515 nm; 40x objective). (E) Mean fluorescence intensity of particles over time. (F) Total number of detectable particles over time. (G) Kinetics of fluorescence intensity for three single particles.