The linear and nonlinear optical properties of a series of linear and cross-conjugated platinum(II) acetylide complexes that contain extended p-(phenylene vinylene) chromophores are reported. The complexes exhibit very high femtosecond two-photon absorption (2PA) cross section values (σ(2) up to 10,000 GM), as measured by nonlinear transmission (NLT) and two-photon excited fluorescence (2PEF) methods. The large 2PA cross sections span a broad range of wavelengths, 570-810 nm, and they overlap with the triplet excited state absorption. Spectral coincidence of high cross section 2PA and triplet absorption is a key feature giving rise to efficient dual-mode optical power limiting (OPL).
The majority of protein functions are governed by their internal local electrostatics. Quantitative information about these interactions can shed light on how proteins work and allow for improving/altering their performance. Green fluorescent protein (GFP) and its mutation variants provide unique optical windows for interrogation of internal electric fields, thanks to the intrinsic fluorophore group formed inside them. Here we use an all-optical method, based on the independent measurements of transition frequency and one- and two-photon absorption cross sections in a number of GFP mutants to evaluate these internal electric fields. Two physical models based on the quadratic Stark effect, either with or without taking into account structural (bond-length) changes of the chromophore in varying field, allow us to separately evaluate the long-range and the total effective (short- and long-range) fields. Both types of the field quantitatively agree with the results of independent molecular dynamic simulations, justifying our method of measurement.
The introduction of calcium ion (Ca2+) indicators based on red fluorescent proteins (RFPs) has created new opportunities for multicolour visualization of intracellular Ca2+ dynamics. However, one drawback of these indicators is that they have optimal two-photon excitation outside the near-infrared window (650–1,000 nm) where tissue is most transparent to light. To address this shortcoming, we developed a long Stokes shift RFP-based Ca2+ indicator, REX-GECO1, with optimal two-photon excitation at <1,000 nm. REX-GECO1 fluoresces at 585 nm when excited at 480 nm or 910 nm by a one- or two-photon process, respectively. We demonstrate that REX-GECO1 can be used as either a ratiometric or intensiometric Ca2+ indicator in organotypic hippocampal slice cultures (one- and two-photon) and the visual system of albino tadpoles (two-photon). Furthermore, we demonstrate single excitation wavelength two-colour Ca2+ and glutamate imaging in organotypic cultures.
We study instantaneous two-photon absorption (2PA) in a series of nominally quasi-centrosymmetric trans-bis(tributylphosphine)-bis-(4-((9,9-diethyl-7-ethynyl-9H-fluoren-2-yl) ethynyl)-R)-platinum complexes, where 11 different substituents, R = N(phenyl)(NPh), NH, OCH, t-butyl, CH, H, F, CF, CN, benzothiazole, and NO, represent a range of electron-donating (ED) and electron-withdrawing (EW) strengths, while the Pt core acts as a weak ED group. We measure the 2PA cross section in the 540-810 nm excitation wavelength range by complementary femtosecond two-photon excited fluorescence (2PEF) and nonlinear transmission (NLT) methods and compare the obtained values to those of the Pt-core chromophore and the corresponding noncentrosymmetric side group (ligand) chromophores. Peak 2PA cross sections of neutral and ED-substituted Pt complexes occur at S → S transitions to higher energy states, above the lowest-energy S → S transition, and the corresponding values increase systematically with increasing ED strength, reaching maximum value, σ ∼ 300 GM (1 GM = 10 cm s), for R = NPh. At transition energies overlapping with the lowest-energy S → S transition in the one-photon absorption (1PA) spectrum, the same neutral and ED-substituted Pt complexes show weak 2PA, σ < 30-100 GM, which is in agreement with the nearly quadrupolar structure of these systems. Surprisingly, EW-substituted Pt complexes display a very different behavior, where the peak 2PA of the S → S transition gradually increases with increasing EW strength, reaching values σ = 700 GM for R = NO, while in the S → S transition region the peak 2PEF cross section decreases. We explained this effect by breaking of inversion symmetry due to conformational distortions associated with low energy barrier for ground-state rotation of the ligands. Our findings are corroborated by theoretical calculations that show large increase of the permanent electric dipole moment change in the S → S transition when ligands with strong EW substituents are twisted by 90° relative to the planar chromophore. Our NLT results in the S → S transition region are quantitatively similar to those obtained from the 2PEF measurement. However, at higher transition energy corresponding to S → S transition region, the NLT method yields effective multiphoton absorption stronger than the 2PEF measurement in the same systems. Such enhancement is observed in all Pt complexes as well as in all ligand chromophores studied, and we tentatively attribute this effect to nearly saturated excited-state absorption (ESA), which may occur if 2PA from the ground state is immediately followed by strongly allowed 1PA to higher excited states.
We present a modular approach to photo-labile protecting groups based on photoinduced electron transfer, providing high sensitivity to two-photon excitation.
A π-extended bis-porphyrin bridged via a diketopyrrolopyrrole unit was prepared in 5 steps. This fully conjugated π-system displays strongly distorted linear absorption, while its two-photon absorption cross-section reaches 2500-3000 GM at 940 nm. LC-like behaviour, easy orientation and low viscosity are, according to XRD, POM and DSC measurements, due to formation of plastic rather than a liquid crystal.
Genetically encoded fluorescent proteins (FPs), and biosensors based on them, provide new insights into how living cells and tissues function. Ultimately, the goal of the bioimaging community is to use these probes deep in tissues and even in entire organisms, and this will require two-photon laser scanning microscopy (TPLSM), with its greater tissue penetration, lower autofluorescence background, and minimum photodamage in the out-of-focus volume. However, the extremely high instantaneous light intensities of femtosecond pulses in the focal volume dramatically increase the probability of further stepwise resonant photon absorption, leading to highly excited, ionizable and reactive states, often resulting in fast bleaching of fluorescent proteins in TPLSM. Here, we show that the femtosecond multiphoton excitation of red FPs (DsRed2 and mFruits), both in solution and live cells, results in a chain of consecutive, partially reversible reactions, with individual rates driven by a high-order (3–5 photon) absorption. The first step of this process corresponds to a three- (DsRed2) or four-photon (mFruits) induced fast isomerization of the chromophore, yielding intermediate fluorescent forms, which then subsequently transform into nonfluorescent products. Our experimental data and model calculations are consistent with a mechanism in which ultrafast electron transfer from the chromophore to a neighboring positively charged amino acid residue triggers the first step of multiphoton chromophore transformations in DsRed2 and mFruits, consisting of decarboxylation of a nearby deprotonated glutamic acid residue.
A series of platinum(II) acetylide complexes containing p-phenylenevinylene and moieties end-capped with triphenylamine groups have been incorporated into poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) monoliths for optical power limiting applications. The one- and two-photon photophysical properties were investigated and compared to the photophysical properties in THF. The absolute two-photon absorption cross-section values for the monolith samples were measured and are comparable to the values obtained in solution. In the PMMA monoliths, the complexes retained the important two-photon absorption and reverse saturable absorption properties necessary for optical power limiting via dual mode mechanism, and their strong nonlinear absorption property was demonstrated by the open-aperture Z-scan method. Photostability studies of the p-phenylenevinylene platinum(II) acetylide complexes showed two photodegradation processes: a trans-to-cis isomerization and a singlet-oxygen sensitized self-oxidative cleavage. The photostability of the least photostable complex TPV0 was increased upon incorporation into a PMMA matrix.
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