Insufficient
brightness of fluorophores poses a major bottleneck
for the advancement of super-resolution microscopes. Despite being
widely used, many rhodamine dyes exhibit sub-optimal brightness due
to the formation of twisted intramolecular charge transfer (TICT)
upon photoexcitation. Herein, we have developed a new class of quaternary
piperazine-substituted rhodamines with outstanding quantum yields
(Φ = 0.93) and superior brightness (ε × Φ =
8.1 × 104 L·mol–1·cm–1), by utilizing the electronic inductive effect to
prevent TICT. We have also successfully deployed these rhodamines
in the super-resolution imaging of the microtubules of fixed cells
and of the cell membrane and lysosomes of live cells. Finally, we
demonstrated that this strategy was generalizable to other families
of fluorophores, resulting in substantially increased quantum yields.
A fundamental, highly fluorescent, and easily accessible scaffold named BOPPY is reported. The use of hydrazine as a bridging linkage between pyrrole and N-heteroarenes enables the binding of two BF 2 units to provide sufficient rigidity of the unsymmetric core skeleton. These resultant unsymmetrical BOPPYs are thus highly fluorescent in their solutions and solid powder states and exhibit high molar absorption coefficients (42200−47000 M −1 cm −1 ), large Stokes shifts, excellent photostability, and insensitivity to pH. More importantly, these BOPPYs showed efficient two-photon absorption in the wide spectral range of 700−900 nm, making them well suited for two-photon fluorescence microscopy imaging in living cells.Letter pubs.acs.org/OrgLett
A change
of mitochondrial temperature can be an important indicator
of mitochondrial metabolism that generates considerable heat. For
this reason, development of fluorescent probes to detect mitochondrial
temperature has become an attractive topic. Previous efforts have
successfully addressed the major issues, such as temperature sensitivity
and mitochondrial targetability. However, there remains a key obstacle
to practical applications. Considering the highly dynamic features
of mitochondria, especially the variation of the inner-membrane potential,
it is quite necessary to permanently immobilize a temperature probe
in mitochondria in order to avoid unstable intracellular localization
along with the changes of mitochondrial status. Herein, we report
Mito-TEM, the first fixable, fluorescent molecular thermometer. Mito-TEM
is based on a positively charged rhodamine B fluorophore that has
the tendency of being attracted to mitochondria, which have negative
potential. This fluorophore containing rotatable substituents also
contributes to the temperature-responsive fluorescence property. Most
importantly, a benzaldehyde is introduced in Mito-TEM as an anchoring
unit that condenses with aminos of the protein and thus immobilizes
the probe in mitochondria. The specific immobilization of Mito-TEM
in mitochondria is unambiguously demonstrated in colocalization imaging.
By using Mito-TEM, a method of visualizing and quantifying a temperature
distribution through grayscale imaging of mitochondria is established
and further applied to monitor the temperature changes of live cells
under light heating and PMA stimulation.
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