4.6 Article

Amphiphilicity-Controlled Localization of Red Emitting Bicationic Fluorophores in Tumor Cells Acting as Bio-Probes and Anticancer Drugs

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 27, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules27123713

Keywords

bications; far-red emission; ultrafast transient absorption spectroscopy; nucleic acid binders; antiproliferative effect; cell-permeant dyes; lipophilicity; bioimaging

Funding

  1. Italian Ministero per l'Universita e la Ricerca Scientifica e Tecnologica, MIUR (Rome, Italy) under the Dipartimenti di Eccellenza 2018-2022 (grant AMIS) program
  2. University of Perugia under the FRB2019 program
  3. project CONVBORSASTUDIOMAZZUCATO

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This study investigated the binding ability of a highly water-soluble and red fluorescence dye with DNA and RNA, as well as the changes in their photophysical properties upon interaction with biological targets. The results revealed that certain fluorophores exhibited antiproliferative effects in the cell nucleus, while others were useful for specific organelle labeling in live cell imaging.
Small organic molecules arouse lively interest for their plethora of possible biological applications, such as anticancer therapy, for their ability to interact with nucleic acids, or bioimaging, thanks to their fluorescence emission. Here, a panchromatic series of styryl-azinium bicationic dyes, which have already proved to exhibit high water-solubility and significant red fluorescence in water, were investigated through spectrofluorimetric titrations to assess the extent of their association constants with DNA and RNA. Femtosecond-resolved transient absorption spectroscopy was also employed to characterize the changes in the photophysical properties of these fluorophores upon interaction with their biological targets. Finally, in vitro experiments conducted on tumor cell lines revealed that some of the bicationic fluorophores had a peculiar localization within cell nuclei exerting important antiproliferative effects, others were instead found to localize in the cytoplasm without leading to cell death, being useful to mark specific organelles in light of live cell bioimaging. Interestingly, this molecule-dependent behavior matched the different amphiphilicity featured by these bioactive compounds, which are thus expected to be caught in a tug-of-war between lipophilicity, ensured by the presence of aromatic rings and needed to pass cell membranes, and hydrophilicity, granted by charged groups and necessary for stability in aqueous media.

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