We propose symmetrical cationic trimethine cyanine dyes with β-substituents
in the polymethine chain based on modified benzothiazole and benzoxazole
heterocycles as probes for the detection and visualization of live
and fixed cells by fluorescence microscopy. The spectral-luminescent
properties of trimethine cyanines have been characterized for free
dyes and in the presence of nucleic acids (NA) and globular proteins.
The studied cyanines are low to moderate fluorescent when free, but
in the presence of NA, they show an increase in emission intensity
up to 111 times; the most pronounced emission increase was observed
for the dyes T-2 in the presence of dsDNA and T-1 with RNA. Spectral methods showed the binding of all dyes to nucleic
acids, and different interaction mechanisms have been proposed. The
ability to visualize cell components of the studied dyes has been
evaluated using different human cell lines (MCF-7, A2780, HeLa, and
Hs27). We have shown that all dyes are cell-permeant staining nucleus
components, probably RNA-rich nucleoli with background fluorescence
in the cytoplasm, except for the dye T-5. The dye T-5 selectively stains some structures in the cytoplasm of
MCF-7 and A2780 cells associated with mitochondria or lysosomes. This
effect has also been confirmed for the normal type of cell line–human
foreskin fibroblasts (Hs27). The costaining of dye T-5 with MitoTracker CMXRos Red demonstrates specificity to mitochondria
at a concentration of 0.1 μM. Colocalization analysis has shown
signals overlapping of dye T-5 and MitoTracker CMXRos
Red (Pearson’s Coefficient value = 0.92 ± 0.04). The photostability
study shows benzoxazole dyes to be up to ∼7 times more photostable
than benzothiazole ones. Moreover, studied benzoxazoles are less cytotoxic
at working concentrations than benzothiazoles (67% of cell viability
for T-4, T-5 compared to 12% for T-1, and ∼30% for T-2, T-3 after 24
h). Therefore, the benzoxazole T-4 dye is proposed for
nucleic acid detection in vitro and intracellular
fluorescence imaging of live and fixed cells. In contrast, the benzoxazole
dye T-5 is proposed as a good alternative to commercial
dyes for mitochondria staining in the green-yellow region of the spectrum.
A new approach for performing Suzuki and Sonogashira reactions of iron(ii) dihalogenoclathrochelates, optimizing their reaction conditions, is elaborated.
Reactions of azide-alkilic cycloaddition are well known since 1893. At the same time, with the elaboration of click chemistry, the techniques of labelling biological objects, particularly by fluorescent dyes, were widely developed. The use of fluorescent labels provides the ability to visually monitor the process streamlines hardware load and reduces research time. Fluorescein is among the fluorophores mostly used for labelling of biomolecules due to its high quantum yields and good stability in biological media. However, despite of commercial availability of fluorescein derivatives functionalized for use in click reactions, methods for their synthesis are virtually absent in the literature. Therefore, we have developed a reliable and effective methodic for the synthesis of functionalized fluoresceines for the use in the click reactions. Synthesis of diacetyl N-(4-azidobutyl)-fluoresceine-5(6)-carboxamide was performed in six stages, starting form resorcinol and trimellitic acid anhydride. The diacetylated analogue was synthesized for the click modifications in the “soft” conditions, since N-(4-azidobutyl)-fluorescein-5(6)-carboxamide is poorly soluble in the classic organic solvents. Proposed synthetic protocol allows to increase the yield of the final and intermediate compounds and to optimized the procedure of their isolation and purification.
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