Rational Design of Cyanine-Based Fluorogenic Dimers to Reduce Nonspecific Interactions with Albumin and Lipid Bilayers: Application to Highly Sensitive Imaging of GPCRs in Living Cells.
Yann BerthoméJulie GerberFabien HanserStéphanie RichéNicolas HumbertChristel ValenciaPascal VillaIuliia A KarpenkoOcéane FlorèsDominique BonnetPublished in: Bioconjugate chemistry (2024)
Fluorogenic dimers with polarity-sensitive folding are powerful probes for live-cell bioimaging. They switch on their fluorescence only after interacting with their targets, thus leading to a high signal-to-noise ratio in wash-free bioimaging. We previously reported the first near-infrared fluorogenic dimers derived from cyanine 5.5 dyes for the optical detection of G protein-coupled receptors. Owing to their hydrophobic character, these dimers are prone to form nonspecific interactions with proteins such as albumin and with the lipid bilayer of the cell membrane resulting in a residual background fluorescence in complex biological media. Herein, we report the rational design of new fluorogenic dimers derived from cyanine 5. By modulating the chemical structure of the cyanine units, we discovered that the two asymmetric cyanine 5.25 dyes were able to form intramolecular H-aggregates and self-quenched in aqueous media. Moreover, the resulting original dimeric probes enabled a significant reduction of the nonspecific interactions with bovine serum albumin and lipid bilayers compared with the first generation of cyanine 5.5 dimers. Finally, the optimized asymmetric fluorogenic dimer was grafted to carbetocin for the specific imaging of the oxytocin receptor under no-wash conditions directly in cell culture media, notably improving the signal-to-background ratio compared with the previous generation of cyanine 5.5 dimers.