Although photolabile protecting groups (PPGs) have found widespread applications in several fields of chemistry, biology and materials science, there is a growing interest in expanding the photochemical toolbox to overcome some of the limitations of classical caging groups. In this work, the synthesis of a new class of visible‐light‐sensitive PPGs based on low‐molecular weight COUPY fluorophores with several attractive properties, including long‐wavelength absorption, is reported. Besides being stable to spontaneous hydrolysis in the dark, COUPY‐based PPGs can be efficiently photoactivated with yellow (560 nm) and red light (620 nm) under physiological‐like conditions, thereby offering the possibility of unmasking functional groups from COUPY photocages under irradiation conditions in which other PPGs remain stable. Additionally, COUPY photocages exhibit excellent cellular uptake and accumulate selectively in mitochondria, opening the door to the delivery of caged analogues of biologically active compounds into these organelles.
Mitochondrial dysfunction has been associated with several human pathologies, including cancer, aging and neurodegenerative diseases. Thus, the availability of selective fluorescent probes for mitochondria could play an important role in the future for monitoring cellular function and disease progression. In this work, we have studied how the photophysical properties and subcellular accumulation of nonconventional coumarin-based COUPY fluorophores can be fine-tuned through replacement of the para-pyridinium moiety with several heterocycles. Among them, ortho,para-pyrimidinium substitution provided novel fluorophores with suitable photophysical properties for bioimaging applications, including emission in the far-red to NIR region, large Stokes' shifts and high photostability.Furthermore, the compounds exhibited excellent cell membrane permeability in living cells and a higher selectivity for mitochondria compared with the parent COUPY fluorophores.Overall, these results provide useful insights for the development of novel mitochondriatargeted fluorescent probes based on small organic molecules, since higher selectivity for this organelle can be achieved through the replacement of conventional N-alkylated pyridinium moieties by the corresponding N-alkylated-ortho,para-pyrimidinium counterparts.
Ceramides (Cer) are bioactive sphingolipids that have been proposed as potential disease biomarkers since they are involved in several cellular stress responses, including apoptosis and senescence. 1-Deoxyceramides (1-deoxyCer), a particular subtype of noncanonical sphingolipids, have been linked to the pathogenesis of type II diabetes. To investigate the metabolism of these bioactive lipids, as well as to have a better understanding of the signaling processes where they participate, it is essential to expand the toolbox of fluorescent sphingolipid probes exhibiting complementary subcellular localization. Herein, we describe a series of new sphingolipid probes tagged with two different organic fluorophores, a far-red/NIR-emitting coumarin derivative (COUPY) and a green-emitting BODIPY. The assembly of the probes involved a combination of olefin cross metathesis and click chemistry reactions as key steps, and these fluorescent ceramide analogues exhibited excellent emission quantum yields, being the Stokes’ shifts of the COUPY derivatives much higher than those of the BODIPY counterparts. Confocal microscopy studies in HeLa cells confirmed an excellent cellular permeability for these sphingolipid probes and revealed that most of the vesicles stained by COUPY probes were either lysosomes or endosomes, whereas BODIPY probes accumulated either in Golgi apparatus or in nonlysosomal intracellular vesicles. The fact that the two sets of fluorescent Cer probes have such different staining patterns indicates that their subcellular distribution is not entirely defined by the sphingolipid moiety but rather influenced by the fluorophore.
Releasing bioactive molecules in specific subcellular locations from the corresponding caged precursors offers great potential in photopharmacology, especially when using biologically compatible visible light. By taking advantage of the intrinsic preference of COUPY coumarins for mitochondria and their long wavelength absorption in the visible region, we have synthesized and fully characterized a series of COUPY-caged model compounds to investigate how the structure of the coumarin caging group affects the rate and efficiency of the photolysis process. Uncaging studies using yellow (560 nm) and red light (620 nm) in phosphate-buffered saline medium have demonstrated that the incorporation of a methyl group in a position adjacent to the photocleavable bond is particularly important to fine-tune the photochemical properties of the caging group. Additionally, the use of a COUPY-caged version of the protonophore 2,4-dinitrophenol allowed us to confirm by confocal microscopy that photoactivation can occur within mitochondria of living HeLa cells upon irradiation with low doses of yellow light. The new photolabile protecting groups presented here complement the photochemical toolbox in therapeutic applications since they will facilitate the delivery of photocages of biologically active compounds into mitochondria.
A new class of visible‐light‐sensitive photolabile protecting groups based on low‐molecular weight COUPY fluorophores, which expand the current photochemical toolbox, is described. Besides being efficiently photoactivated with yellow and red light under physiological‐like conditions, COUPY photocages exhibit excellent cellular uptake and accumulate selectively in mitochondria, opening the door to the delivery of caged analogues of biologically active compounds into these organelles. For more details see the Communication by V. Marchán et al. on page 16222.
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