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AcetylacetonateBODIPY-Biscyclometalated Iridium(III) Complexes: Effective Strategy towards Smarter Fluorescent Photosensitizer Agents.

Eduardo PalaoRebeca Sola-LlanoAndrea TaberoHegoi ManzanoAntonia R AgarrabeitiaAngeles VillanuevaIñigo López-ArbeloaVirginia Martínez-MartínezMaria J Ortiz
Published in: Chemistry (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2017)
Biscyclometalated IrIII complexes involving boron-dipyrromethene (BODIPY)-based ancillary ligands, where the BODIPY unit is grafted to different chelating cores (acetylacetonate for Ir-1 and Ir-2, and bipyridine for Ir-3) by the BODIPY meso position, have been synthesized and characterized. Complexes with the BODIPY moiety directly grafted to acetylacetonate (Ir-1 and Ir-2) exhibit higher absorption coefficients (ϵ≈4.46×104  m-1  cm-1 and 3.38×104  m-1  cm-1 at 517 nm and 594 nm, respectively), higher moderate fluorescence emission (φfl ≈0.08 and 0.22 at 528 nm and 652 nm, respectively) and, in particular, more efficient singlet oxygen generation upon visible-light irradiation (φΔ ≈0.86 and 0.59, respectively) than that exhibited by Ir-3 (φΔ ≈0.51, but only under UV light). Phosphorescence emission, nanosecond time-resolved transient absorption, and DFT calculations suggest that BODIPY-localized long-lived 3 IL states are populated for Ir-1 and Ir-2. In vitro photodynamic therapy (PDT) activity studied for Ir-1 and Ir-2 in HeLa cells shows that such complexes are efficiently internalized into the cells, exhibiting low dark- and high photocytoxicity, even at significantly low complex concentration, making them potentially suitable as theranostic agents.
Keyphrases
  • photodynamic therapy
  • living cells
  • fluorescent probe
  • fluorescence imaging
  • induced apoptosis
  • cell cycle arrest
  • molecular dynamics
  • oxidative stress
  • brain injury
  • room temperature
  • pi k akt
  • energy transfer
  • label free