Photodynamic Therapy with Targeted Release of Boron-Dipyrromethene Dye from Cobalt(III) Prodrugs in Red Light.
Avishek JanaSubhadarsini SahooSubhadeep PaulSomarupa SahooChelliah JayabaskaranAkhil R ChakravartyPublished in: Inorganic chemistry (2024)
Boron-dipyrromethene (BODIPY) dyes are promising photosensitizers for cellular imaging and photodynamic therapy (PDT) owing to their excellent photophysical properties and the synthetically tunable core. Metalation provides a convenient way to overcome the drawbacks arising from their low aqueous solubility. New photo-/redox-responsive Co(III) prodrug chaperones are developed as anticancer PDT agents for efficient cellular delivery of red-light-active BODIPY dyes. The photobiological activity of heteroleptic Co(III) complexes derived from tris(2-pyridylmethyl)amine (TPA) and acetylacetone-conjugated PEGylated distyryl BODIPY ( HL 1 ) or its dibromo analogue ( HL 2 ), [Co III (TPA)(L 1 /L 2 )](ClO 4 ) 2 ( 1 and 2 ), are investigated. The Co(III)/Co(II) redox potential is tuned using the Co(III)-TPA scaffold. Complex 1 displays the in vitro release of BODIPY on red light irradiation. Complex 2 , having good singlet oxygen quantum yield (Φ Δ ∼ 0.28 in DMSO), demonstrates submicromolar photocytotoxicity to HeLa cancer cells (IC 50 ≈ 0.23 μM) while being less toxic to HPL1D normal cells in red light. Cellular imaging using the emissive complex 1 shows mitochondrial localization and significant penetration into the HeLa tumor spheroids. Complex 2 shows supercoiled DNA photocleavage activity and apoptotic cell death through phototriggered generation of reactive oxygen species. The Co(III)-BODIPY prodrug conjugates exemplify new type of phototherapeutic agents with better efficacy than the organic dyes alone in the phototherapeutic window.
Keyphrases
- photodynamic therapy
- cell death
- fluorescent probe
- fluorescence imaging
- cell cycle arrest
- cancer therapy
- living cells
- high resolution
- oxidative stress
- induced apoptosis
- radiation therapy
- risk assessment
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- heat stress
- circulating tumor
- pi k akt
- nucleic acid
- tissue engineering
- anti inflammatory