Photochemical uncaging of bio-active molecules was introduced in 1977, but since then, there has been no substantial improvement in the properties of generic caging chromophores. We have developed a new chromophore, nitrodibenzofuran (NDBF) for ultra-efficient uncaging of second messengers inside cells. Photolysis of a NDBF derivative of EGTA (caged calcium) is about 16-160 times more efficient than photolysis of the most widely used caged compounds (the quantum yield of photolysis is 0.7 and the extinction coefficient is 18,400 M(-1) cm(-1)). Ultraviolet (UV)-laser photolysis of NDBF-EGTA:Ca(2+) rapidly released Ca(2+) (rate of 20,000 s(-1)) and initiated contraction of skinned guinea pig cardiac muscle. NDBF-EGTA has a two-photon cross-section of approximately 0.6 GM and two-photon photolysis induced localized Ca(2+)-induced Ca(2+) release from the sarcoplasmic recticulum of intact cardiac myocytes. Thus, the NDBF chromophore has great promise as a generic and photochemically efficient protecting group for both one- and two-photon uncaging in living cells.
Intramolecularly hydrogen-bonded organic compounds often exhibit fluorescence emission at considerably longer wavelengths than typical fluorescence as a result of excited-state intramolecular proton transfer (ESIPT). The structure-property relationship of such ESIPT molecules, however, remains obscure. The present article reports the excited-state dynamics of a new family of ESIPT molecules, 2-(2'-hydroxynaphthyl)benzazoles 1-3, based on steady-state and time-resolved spectroscopy measurements. In comparison with the parent compound HBO, all three compounds 1-3 exhibited absorption bands at longer wavelengths and emitted fluorescence from the excited keto-tautomer K* at shorter wavelengths, indicating that the introduction of a naphthalene ring increases the energy gap between the ground and excited states for the keto-tautomer despite the expansion of the aromatic ring. Time-resolved fluorescence spectra revealed dual emission for compounds 1 and 3, consisting of two distinct fluorescence bands originating from K* and the excited rotamer E'*, whereas 2 exhibited fluorescence only from the K* state. In the transient absorption spectra, both the T-T absorption band and the ground state absorption band of the Z-keto tautomer were observed for 1, whereas only the T-T absorption band was observed for 2 and only the Z-keto tautomer band was observed for 3.
Second harmonic generation (SHG) imaging can be used to visualize unique biological phenomena, but currently available dyes limit its application owing to the strong fluorescent signals that they generate together with SHG. Here we report the first non-fluorescent and membrane potential-sensitive SHG-active organic dye Ap3. Ap3 is photostable and generates SH signals at the plasma membrane with virtually no fluorescent signals, in sharp contrast to the previously used fluorescent dye FM4-64. When tested in neurons, Ap3-SHG shows linear membrane potential sensitivity and fast responses to action potentials, and also shows significantly reduced photodamage compared with FM4-64. The SHG-specific nature of Ap3 allows simultaneous and completely independent imaging of SHG signals and fluorescent signals from various reporter molecules, including markers of cellular organelles and intracellular calcium. Therefore, this SHG-specific dye enables true multimodal two-photon imaging in biological samples.
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