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Seeing and Cleaving: Turn-Off Fluorophore Uncaging and Its Application in Hydrogel Photopatterning and Traceable Neurotransmitter Photocages.

Authors :
Pantl O
Chiovini B
Szalay G
Turczel G
Kovács E
Mucsi Z
Rózsa B
Cseri L
Source :
ACS applied materials & interfaces [ACS Appl Mater Interfaces] 2024 Oct 05. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Oct 05.
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Ahead of Print

Abstract

The advancements in targeted drug release and experimental neuroscience have amplified the scientific interest in photolabile protecting groups (PPGs) and photouncaging. The growing need for the detection of uncaging events has led to the development of reporters with fluorescence turn-on upon uncaging. In contrast, fluorescent tags with turn-off properties have been drastically underexplored, although there are applications where they would be sought after. In this work, a rhodamine-based fluorescent tag is developed with signal turn-off following photouncaging. One-photon photolysis experiments reveal a ready loss of red fluorescence signal upon UV (365 nm) irradiation, while no significant change is observed in control experiments in the absence of PPG or with irradiation around the absorption maximum of the fluorophore (595 nm). The two-photon photolysis of the turn-off fluorescent tag is explored in hydrogel photolithography experiments. The hydrogel-bound tag enables the power-, dwell time-, and wavelength-dependent construction of intricate patterns and gradients. Finally, a prominent caged neurotransmitter (MNI-Glu) is modified with the fluorescent tag, resulting in the glutamate precursor named as GlutaTrace with fluorescence traceability and turn-off upon photouncaging. GlutaTrace is successfully applied for the visualization of glutamate precursor distribution following capillary microinjection and for the selective excitation of neurons in a mouse brain model.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1944-8252
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
ACS applied materials & interfaces
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
39368105
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/acsami.4c10861