Polymer nanoparticles based on molecular polymer brushes allow precise and independent tailoring of nanoparticle characteristics.This enables the synthesis of soft hydrophilic polymer particles with matching composition and surface chemistry where only the aspect-ratio is varied. PEGylated brush nanoparticles revealed that brush nanorods exhibit higher association and penetration into multicellular tumour spheroids compared to their spherical or filamentous counterparts.
The balance of oxidants and antioxidants within the cell is crucial for maintaining health, and regulating physiological processes such as signalling. Consequently, imbalances between oxidants and antioxidants are now understood to lead to oxidative stress, a physiological feature that underlies many diseases. These processes have spurred the field of chemical biology to develop a plethora of sensors, both small-molecule and fluorescent protein-based, for the detection of specific oxidizing species and general redox balances within cells. The mitochondrion, in particular, is the site of many vital redox reactions. There is therefore a need to target redox sensors to this particular organelle. It has been well established that targeting mitochondria can be achieved by the use of a lipophilic cation-targeting group, or by utilizing natural peptidic mitochondrial localization sequences. Here, we review how these two approaches have been used by a number of researchers to develop mitochondrially localized fluorescent redox sensors that are already proving useful in providing insights into the roles of reactive oxygen species in the mitochondria.
Sensing hypoxia in tissues and cell models can provide insights into its role in disease states and cell development. Fluorescence imaging is a minimally-invasive method of visualising hypoxia in many biological systems. Here we present a series of improved bioreductive fluorescent sensors based on a nitro-naphthalimide structure, in which selectivity, photophysical properties, toxicity and cellular uptake are tuned through structural modifications. This new range of compounds provides improved probes for imaging and monitoring hypoxia, customised for a range of different applications. Studies in monolayers show the different reducing capabilities of hypoxia-resistant and non-resistant cell lines, and studies in tumour models show successful staining of the hypoxic region.
The use of fluorescent markers and probes greatly enhances biological investigations but relies on the provision of an array of fluorophores with diverse properties. Herein we report a novel carborane-containing coumarin, 5, which is sufficiently lipophilic to localise in cellular lipid droplets. In non-polar solvents which show comparable polarities to those of a lipid environment, compound 5 exhibits a fluorescence quantum yield two orders of magnitude greater than found in aqueous solvents, adding a further degree of selectivity to lipid droplet imaging. Compound 5 can stain lipid droplets in ex vivo adipocytes as well as in cultured cells, and can be utilised in flow cytometry as well as confocal microscopy.
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