Analogues
of Texas red incorporating the heavy chalcogens S, Se,
and Te atoms in the xanthylium core were prepared from the addition
of aryl Grignard reagents to appropriate chalcogenoxanthone precursors.
The xanthones were prepared via directed metalation of amide precursors,
addition of dichalcogenide electrophiles, and electrophilic cyclization
of the resulting chalcogenides with phosphorus oxychloride and triethylamine.
The Texas red analogues incorporate two fused julolidine rings containing
the rhodamine nitrogen atoms. Analogues containing two “half-julolidine”
groups (a trimethyltetrahydroquinoline) and one julolidine and one
“half-julolidine” were also prepared. The photophysics
of the Texas red analogues were examined. The S-analogues were highly
fluorescent, the Se-analogues generated single oxygen (1O2) efficiently upon irradiation, and the Te-analogues
were easily oxidized to rhodamines with the telluroxide oxidation
state. The tellurorhodamine telluroxides absorb at wavelengths ≥690
nm and emit with fluorescence maxima >720 nm. A mesityl-substituted
tellurorhodamine derivative localized in the mitochondria of Colo-26
cells (a murine colon carcinoma cell line) and was oxidized in vitro to the fluorescent telluroxide.
We
examined a series of selenorhodamines with amide and thioamide
functionality at the 5-position of a 9-(2-thienyl) substituent on
the selenorhodamine core for their potential as photosensitizers for
photodynamic therapy (PDT) in P-glycoprotein (P-gp) expressing cells.
These compounds were examined for their photophysical properties (absorption,
fluorescence, and ability to generate singlet oxygen), for their uptake
into Colo-26 cells in the absence or presence of verapamil, for their
dark and phototoxicity toward Colo-26 cells, for their rates of transport
in monolayers of multidrug-resistant, P-gp-overexpressing MDCKII-MDR1
cells, and for their colocalization with mitochondrial specific agents
in Colo-26 cells. Thioamide derivatives 16b and 18b were more effective photosensitizers than amide derivatives 15b and 17b. Selenorhodamine thioamides 16b and 18b were useful in a combination therapy
to treat Colo-26 cells in vitro: a synergistic therapeutic effect was observed when Colo-26 cells
were exposed to PDT and treatment with the cancer drug doxorubicin.
Extended thio- and selenorhodamines with a linear or angular fused benzo group were prepared. The absorption maxima for these compounds fell between 640 and 700nm. The extended rhodamines were evaluated for their potential as photosensitizers for photodynamic therapy in Colo-26 cells. These compounds were examined for their photophysical properties (absorption, fluorescence, and ability to generate singlet oxygen), for their dark and phototoxicity toward Colo-26 cells, and for their co-localization with mitochondrial-specific agents in Colo-26 and HUT-78 cells. The angular extended rhodamines were effective photosensitizers toward Colo-26 cells with 1.0Jcm(-2) laser light delivered at λmax±2nm with values of EC50 of (2.8±0.4)×10(-7)M for sulfur-containing analogue 6-S and (6.4±0.4)×10(-8)M for selenium-containing analogue 6-Se. The linear extended rhodamines were effective photosensitizers toward Colo-26 cells with 5 and 10Jcm(-2) of broad-band light (EC50's⩽2.4×10(-7)M).
Extracorporeal photopheresis (ECP) has been used successfully in the treatment of erythrodermic cutaneous T cell lymphoma (CTCL), and other T cell-mediated disorders. Not all patients obtain a significant or durable response from ECP. The design of a selective photosensitizer that spares desirable lymphocytes while targeting malignant T cells may promote cytotoxic T cell responses and improve outcomes after ECP. A series of selenorhodamines built with variations of the Texas red core targeted the mitochondria of malignant T cells, were phototoxic to malignant T cells presumably via their ability to generate singlet oxygen, and were transported by P-glycoprotein (P-gp). To determine the selectivity of the photosensitizers in the ECP milieu, staphylococcal enterotoxin B (SEB)-stimulated and non-stimulated human lymphocytes were combined with HUT-78 cells (a CTCL) to simulate ECP. The amide-containing analogues of the selenorhodamines were transported more rapidly than the thioamide analogues in monolayers of MDCKII-MDR1 cells and, consequently, were extruded more rapidly from P-gp-expressing T cells than the corresponding thioamide analogues. Selenorhodamine 6 with the Texas red core and a piperidylamide functionality was phototoxic to >90% of malignant T cells while sparing >60% of both stimulated and non-stimulated T cells. In the resting T cells, (63 ± 7)% of the CD4+ T cell compartment, and (78 ± 2.5)% of the CD8+ cytotoxic T cell population were preserved, resulting in an enrichment of healthy and cytotoxic T cells after photodepletion.
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