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Fluorescence lifetime microscopy unveils the supramolecular organization of liposomal Doxorubicin.

Paolo TentoriGiovanni SignoreAndrea CamposeoAnnalisa CarrettaGianmarco FerriPasqualantonio PingueStefano LuinDaniela PozziEnrico GrattonFabio BeltramGiulio CaraccioloFrancesco Cardarelli
Published in: Nanoscale (2022)
The supramolecular organization of Doxorubicin (DOX) within the standard Doxoves® liposomal formulation (DOX®) is investigated using visible light and phasor approach to fluorescence lifetime imaging (phasor-FLIM). First, the phasor-FLIM signature of DOX® is resolved into the contribution of three co-existing fluorescent species, each with its characteristic mono-exponential lifetime, namely: crystallized DOX (DOX c , 0.2 ns), free DOX (DOX f , 1.0 ns), and DOX bound to the liposomal membrane (DOX b , 4.5 ns). Then, the exact molar fractions of the three species are determined by combining phasor-FLIM with quantitative absorption/fluorescence spectroscopy on DOX c , DOX f , and DOX b pure standards. The final picture on DOX® comprises most of the drug in the crystallized form (∼98%), with the remaining fractions divided between free (∼1.4%) and membrane-bound drug (∼0.7%). Finally, phasor-FLIM in the presence of a DOX dynamic quencher allows us to suggest that DOX f is both encapsulated and non-encapsulated, and that DOX b is present on both liposome-membrane leaflets. We argue that the present experimental protocol can be applied to the investigation of the supramolecular organization of encapsulated luminescent drugs/molecules all the way from the production phase to their state within living matter.
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