4.8 Article

Development of an iminocoumarin-based zinc sensor suitable for ratiometric fluorescence imaging of neuronal zinc

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 129, Issue 44, Pages 13447-13454

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ja072432g

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Ratiometric imaging is a technique to reduce artifacts by minimizing the influence of extraneous factors on the fluorescence of a sensor and is particularly useful for cellular imaging studies. Here we characterized the iminocoumarin fluorophore as a new scaffold for sensors for ratiometric imaging. The iminocoumarin 4 showed a high quantum yield in aqueous media on excitation in the visible wavelength region, while its coumarin analogue showed little fluorescence. We therefore developed a novel fluorescence probe, ZnIC, for ratiometric imaging of Zn2+, using iminocoumarin as a fluorophore and (ethylamino)dipicolylamine as a Zn2+ chelator. ZnIC exhibited almost the same fluorescence properties as 4, and the emission spectrum of this probe was red-shifted on addition of Zn2+ under physiological conditions. ZnIC is selective for Zn2+ over other biologically important metal ions, such as Ca2+ and Mg2+, and has high affinity for Zn2+. To confirm the suitability of ZnIC for biological applications, we employed it for the ratiometric detection of changes in intracellular Zn2+ in cultured cells and in rat hippocampal slices. The results indicate that iminocoumarin is a useful fluorophore for fluorescence microscopic imaging and that ZnIC should be useful for studies on the biological functions of Zn2+.

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