4.6 Article

The effect of solvent polarity and macromolecular crowding on the viscosity sensitivity of a molecular rotor BODIPY-C10

Journal

PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 22, Issue 16, Pages 8296-8303

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c9cp06865a

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Funding

  1. Research Council of Lithuania [S-MIP-19-6]

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Viscosity is the key parameter of many biological systems as it influences passive diffusion, affects the lipid raft formation and plays a significant role in several diseases on a cellular level. Consequently, determination of precise viscosity values is of great interest and viscosity-sensitive fluorescent probes offer a convenient solution for this task. One of the most frequently used viscosity-sensitive probes is BODIPY-C-10. Yet despite its regular use, BODIPY-C-10 remains insufficiently investigated. In this work, we explored how the polarity, hydrogen bonding abilities of the solvent and the presence of macromolecules affect the viscosity-sensing qualities of BODIPY-C-10. In addition, we investigated the relaxation pathway of BODIPY-C-10 with the help of femtosecond transient absorption and time-dependent DFT calculations. Our results show that while BODIPY-C-10 is not affected by protic solvents, accurate quantitative determination of viscosity is possible only if BODIPY-C-10 is calibrated in the same polarity environment as in the sample of interest, and the size of the surrounding molecules is not larger than the size of BODIPY-C-10. The latter limitation is likely to apply to all molecular rotors.

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