Nanotubes hold promise for a number of biological and materials applications because of their high aspect ratio and encapsulation potential. A particularly attractive goal is to access nanotubes that exert well-defined control over their cargo, such as selective encapsulation, precise positioning of the guests along the nanotube length and triggered release of this cargo in response to specific external stimuli. Here, we report the construction of DNA nanotubes with longitudinal variation and alternating larger and smaller capsules along the tube length. Size-selective encapsulation of gold nanoparticles into the large capsules of these tubes leads to 'nanopeapod' particle lines with positioning of the particles 65 nm apart. These nanotubes can then be opened when specific DNA strands are added to release their particle cargo spontaneously. This approach could lead to new applications of self-assembled nanotubes, such as in the precise organization of one-dimensional nanomaterials, gene-triggered selective delivery of drugs and biological sensing.
The absorption and fluorescence spectra, fluorescence quantum yields, lifetimes and time-resolved fluorescence spectra are reported for nine different fluorescent DNA-dyes. The work was initiated in search of a quantitative method to detect the ratio of single-to-double stranded DNA (ssDNA/dsDNA) in solution based on the photophysics of dye-DNA complexes; the result is a comprehensive study providing a vast amount of information for users of DNA strains. The dyes examined were the bisbenzimide or indole-derived stains (Hoechst 33342, Hoechst 33258 and 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole), phenanthridinium stains (ethidium bromide and propidium iodide) and cyanine dyes (PicoGreen, YOYO-1 iodide, SYBR Green I and SYBR Gold). All were evaluated under the same experimental conditions in terms of ionic strength, pH and dye-DNA ratio. Among the photophysical properties evaluated only fluorescence lifetimes for the cyanine stilbene dyes allowed a convenient differentiation between ssDNA and dsDNA. The bisbenzimide dyes showed multiexponential decays when bound to either form of DNA, making lifetime-based analysis cumbersome with inherent errors. These dyes also presented biexponential decay when free in aqueous buffered solutions at different pH. A mechanism for their deactivation is proposed based on two different conformers decaying with different kinetics. The phenanthridinium dyes showed monoexponential decays with ssDNA and dsDNA, but there was no discrimination between them. High dye-DNA ratios (e.g. 1:1) resulted in multiexponential decays for cyanine dyes, resulting from energy transfer or self-quenching deactivation. Shifts in both absorption and fluorescence maxima for both ssDNA and dsDNA DNA-cyanine dye complexes were small. Broadening of dye-ssDNA absorption and fluorescence bands for the cyanine dyes relative to dye-dsDNA bands was detected and attributed to higher degrees of rotational freedom in the former.
Although the general mechanisms of lipid oxidation are known, the chemical steps through which photosensitizers and light permeabilize lipid membranes are still poorly understood. Herein we characterized the products of lipid photooxidation and their effects on lipid bilayers, also giving insight into their formation pathways. Our experimental system was designed to allow two phenothiazinium-based photosensitizers (methylene blue, MB, and DO15) to deliver the same amount of singlet oxygen molecules per second to 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl- sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine liposome membranes, but with a substantial difference in terms of the extent of direct physical contact with lipid double bonds; that is, DO15 has a 27-times higher colocalization with ω-9 lipid double bonds than MB. Under this condition, DO15 permeabilizes membranes at least 1 order of magnitude more efficiently than MB, a result that was also valid for liposomes made of polyunsaturated lipids. Quantification of reaction products uncovered a mixture of phospholipid hydroperoxides, alcohols, ketones, and aldehydes. Although both photosensitizers allowed the formation of hydroperoxides, the oxidized products that require direct reactions between photosensitizer and lipids were more prevalent in liposomes oxidized by DO15. Membrane permeabilization was always connected with the presence of lipid aldehydes, which cause a substantial decrease in the Gibbs free energy barrier for water permeation. Processes depending on direct contact between photosensitizers and lipids were revealed to be essential for the progress of lipid oxidation and consequently for aldehyde formation, providing a molecular-level explanation of why membrane binding correlates so well with the cell-killing efficiency of photosensitizers.
The preparation, spectroscopic, and electrochemical characterization of a family of 16 new bodipy dyes with tunable redox potentials and versatile functional groups is reported. Electron-withdrawing or -donating groups (Et, H, Cl, or CN) at positions C2 and C6 enabled tuning the redox potentials within a ca. 0.7 eV window without significantly affecting either the HOMO-LUMO gap or the absorption and emission spectra. Hydroxymethyl or formyl groups at the meso (C8) position in turn provided a handle for covalent tethering to receptors and biomolecules of interest, which dispenses with the more commonly used meso-aryl moiety as a means to tag molecules. The dyes can thus be coupled to both electrophiles and nucleophiles. Importantly, it is shown that meso-formyl bodipy dyes are nonemissive and have significantly lower molar extinction coefficients compared to their meso-hydroxymethyl and meso-acetoxymethyl counterparts (which in turn are bright, with emission quantum yields in the range of 0.7-1). The nonemissive meso-formyl bodipy dyes thus provide unique opportunities as fluorogenic probes of nucleophilic attack and as fluorescent labeling agents where uncoupled fluorophores will not contribute to the fluorescence background. Overall, the new bodipy dyes reported here are promising candidates for the preparation of fluorescent sensors relying on photoinduced electron transfer and may find use in a number of fluorescent-labeling protocols.
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