4.6 Article

Influence of Oxidative Stress on Time-Resolved Oxygen Detection by [Ru(Phen)3]2+ In Vivo and In Vitro

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 26, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules26020485

Keywords

oxygen detection; dendrogram analysis; hierarchical clustering; cancer cells; luminescence lifetime; hydrogen peroxide; oxidative stress; photodynamic therapy; time-resolved imaging

Funding

  1. Ministry of education, science, research and sport of the Slovak Republic [VEGA 1/0156/18, VEGA 1/0421/18]
  2. Swiss National Science Foundation [315230 185262/1]
  3. Slovak Research and development agency [APVV-15-0485]
  4. Operational Programme Integrated Infrastructure - ERDF [ITMS2014+: 313011V455]
  5. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) [315230_185262] Funding Source: Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)

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The study optimizes the evaluation of tissue and cell oxygenation using luminescence lifetimes of molecular probes, demonstrating potential for cancer detection in early stages. Challenges still exist in detecting tissue oxygenation under oxidative stress conditions. The research also shows the applicability of [Ru(Phen)(3)](2+) for in vitro oxygen detection under various stress factors.
Detection of tissue and cell oxygenation is of high importance in fundamental biological and in many medical applications, particularly for monitoring dysfunction in the early stages of cancer. Measurements of the luminescence lifetimes of molecular probes offer a very promising and non-invasive approach to estimate tissue and cell oxygenation in vivo and in vitro. We optimized the evaluation of oxygen detection in vivo by [Ru(Phen)(3)](2+) in the chicken embryo chorioallantoic membrane model. Its luminescence lifetimes measured in the CAM were analyzed through hierarchical clustering. The detection of the tissue oxygenation at the oxidative stress conditions is still challenging. We applied simultaneous time-resolved recording of the mitochondrial probe MitoTracker(TM) OrangeCMTMRos fluorescence and [Ru(Phen)(3)](2+) phosphorescence imaging in the intact cell without affecting the sensitivities of these molecular probes. [Ru(Phen)(3)](2+) was demonstrated to be suitable for in vitro detection of oxygen under various stress factors that mimic oxidative stress: other molecular sensors, H2O2, and curcumin-mediated photodynamic therapy in glioma cancer cells. Low phototoxicities of the molecular probes were finally observed. Our study offers a high potential for the application and generalization of tissue oxygenation as an innovative approach based on the similarities between interdependent biological influences. It is particularly suitable for therapeutic approaches targeting metabolic alterations as well as oxygen, glucose, or lipid deprivation.

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