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Phosphorescent sensor for biological mobile zinc

Authors :
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Chemistry
Lippard, Stephen J.
You, Youngmin
Lee, Sumin
Kim, Tae Hee
Ohkubo, Kei
Chae, Weon-Sik
Fukuzumi, Shunichi
Jhon, Gil-Ja
Nam, Wonwoo
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Chemistry
Lippard, Stephen J.
You, Youngmin
Lee, Sumin
Kim, Tae Hee
Ohkubo, Kei
Chae, Weon-Sik
Fukuzumi, Shunichi
Jhon, Gil-Ja
Nam, Wonwoo
Source :
Prof. Lippard via Erja Kajosalo
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

A new phosphorescent zinc sensor (ZIrF) was constructed, based on an Ir(III) complex bearing two 2-(2,4-difluorophenyl)pyridine (dfppy) cyclometalating ligands and a neutral 1,10-phenanthroline (phen) ligand. A zinc-specific di(2-picolyl)amine (DPA) receptor was introduced at the 4-position of the phen ligand via a methylene linker. The cationic Ir(III) complex exhibited dual phosphorescence bands in CH[subscript 3]CN solutions originating from blue and yellow emission of the dfppy and phen ligands, respectively. Zinc coordination selectively enhanced the latter, affording a phosphorescence ratiometric response. Electrochemical techniques, quantum chemical calculations, and steady-state and femtosecond spectroscopy were employed to establish a photophysical mechanism for this phosphorescence response. The studies revealed that zinc coordination perturbs nonemissive processes of photoinduced electron transfer and intraligand charge-transfer transition occurring between DPA and phen. ZIrF can detect zinc ions in a reversible and selective manner in buffered solution (pH 7.0, 25 mM PIPES) with K[subscript d] = 11 nM and pK[subscript a] = 4.16. Enhanced signal-to-noise ratios were achieved by time-gated acquisition of long-lived phosphorescence signals. The sensor was applied to image biological free zinc ions in live A549 cells by confocal laser scanning microscopy. A fluorescence lifetime imaging microscope detected an increase in photoluminescence lifetime for zinc-treated A549 cells as compared to controls. ZIrF is the first successful phosphorescent sensor that detects zinc ions in biological samples.<br />National Institute of General Medical Sciences (U.S.) (Grant GM065519)<br />Ewha Woman's University (Korea) (RP-Grant 2010)

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Prof. Lippard via Erja Kajosalo
Notes :
application/pdf, en_US
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.ocn819523692
Document Type :
Electronic Resource