4.4 Article

Chiral bis-Acetal Porphyrazines as Near-infrared Optical Agents for Detection and Treatment of Cancer

Journal

PHOTOCHEMISTRY AND PHOTOBIOLOGY
Volume 86, Issue 2, Pages 410-417

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1751-1097.2009.00681.x

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. Nanoscale Science and Engineering Initiative of the National Science Foundation [EEC-0647560, CHE0500796]
  2. The Penny Severns Breast
  3. Cervical
  4. Ovarian Cancer Research Fund
  5. VA Merit Review Grant
  6. US-Israel Binational Science Foundation
  7. Michael David Falk Chair in Laser Phototherapy

Ask authors/readers for more resources

We report the preparation of chiral oxygen atom-appended porphyrazines (pzs) as biomedical optical agents that absorb and emit in the near-IR wavelength range. These pzs take the form M[pz(A(4-n)B(n))], where A and B represent moieties appended to the pz's pyrrole entities, A = (2R,3R) 2,3-dimethyl-2,3-dimethoxy-1,4-diox-2-ene, B = beta,beta'-di-isopropoxybenzo, M is the incorporated metal ion (M = H-2, Zn), and n = 0, 1, 2 (-cis/-trans) and 3 (Scheme 1). When dissolved in polar media, H-2[pz(trans-A(2)B(2))] 5a does not fluoresce and has a negligible quantum yield for singlet oxygen generation ((Delta) = 0.074 +/- 0.001, methanol), as measured by the photo-oxidation of DMA. However, when sequestered in the nonpolar environment of a liposome, it displays strong NIR emission (lambda(max) = 705 nm, (f) = 0.087) and an extremely high singlet oxygen quantum yield ((Delta)-> 1). Of this series, H-2[pz(trans-A(2)B(2))] 5a is attractive as a potential optical probe, showing strongly fluorescent uptake by cells in culture, while 3-[4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl]-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide measurements of cell viability show no evidence of dark toxicity. This agent does show significant photoinduced toxicity suggesting that pzs such as 5a have promise as theranostic optical agents that can be visualized with fluorescence imaging while acting as a sensitizer for photodynamic therapy.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.4
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available