Photoactivatable Fluorophores for Bioimaging Applications.
Yang ZhangYeting ZhengAndrea TomassiniAmbarish Kumar SinghFrançisco M RaymoPublished in: ACS applied optical materials (2023)
Photoactivatable fluorophores provide the opportunity to switch fluorescence on exclusively in a selected area within a sample of interest at a precise interval of time. Such a level of spatiotemporal fluorescence control enables the implementation of imaging schemes to monitor dynamic events in real time and visualize structural features with nanometer resolution. These transformative imaging methods are contributing fundamental insights on diverse cellular processes with profound implications in biology and medicine. Current photoactivatable fluorophores, however, become emissive only after the activation event, preventing the acquisition of fluorescence images and, hence, the visualization of the sample prior to activation. We developed a family of photoactivatable fluorophores capable of interconverting between emissive states with spectrally resolved fluorescence, instead of switching from a nonemissive state to an emissive one. We demonstrated that our compounds allow the real-time monitoring of molecules diffusing across the cellular blastoderm of developing embryos as well as of polymer beads translocating along the intestinal tract of live nematodes. Additionally, they also permit the tracking of single molecules in the lysosomal compartments of live cells and the visualization of these organelles with nanometer resolution. Indeed, our photoactivatable fluorophores may evolve into invaluable analytical tools for the investigation of the fundamental factors regulating the functions and structures of cells at the molecular level.
Keyphrases
- single molecule
- induced apoptosis
- high resolution
- energy transfer
- cell cycle arrest
- living cells
- primary care
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- healthcare
- deep learning
- oxidative stress
- signaling pathway
- cell death
- quantum dots
- mass spectrometry
- intellectual disability
- pi k akt
- machine learning
- fluorescent probe
- liquid chromatography