4.6 Article

Pulse Radiolysis Investigation of Radicals Derived from Water-Soluble Cyanine Dyes: Implications for Super-resolution Microscopy

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY A
Volume 125, Issue 26, Pages 5779-5793

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpca.1c03776

Keywords

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Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences [DE-FC02-04ER15533]

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This study investigated the absorption spectra and decay kinetics of a series of cyanine dyes with different p-conjugation lengths under reducing or oxidizing conditions in water. The results showed that the absorption transitions of the various radicals were weak and somewhat broadened, but correlated with the p-conjugation length. Under anaerobic conditions, the transient species decayed on a microsecond to millisecond time scale, with the lifetime depending on molecular structure, radiation dose, and dye concentration.
Light-induced blinking, an inherent feature of many forms of super-resolution microscopy, has been linked to transient reduction of the fluorescent cyanine dye used as an imaging agent. There is, however, only scant literature information related to one-electron reduced cyanine dyes, especially in an aqueous environment. Here, we examine a small series of cyanine dyes, possessing disparate p-conjugation lengths, under selective reducing or oxidizing conditions. The experiment allows recording of both differential absorption spectra and decay kinetics of the resultant one-electron reduced or oxidized transient species in water. Relative to the ground state, absorption transitions for the various radicals are weak and somewhat broadened but do allow correlation with the p-conjugation length. In all cases, absorption maxima lie to the blue of the main ground-state transition. Under anaerobic conditions, the transient species decay on the microsecond to millisecond time scale, with the mean lifetime depending on molecular structure, radiation dose, and dye concentration. The experimental absorption spectra recorded for the one-electron reduced radicals and the presumed dimer cation radical compare well to spectra obtained from time-dependent density functional theory calculations. The results allow conclusions to be drawn regarding the plausibility of the reduced species being responsible for light-induced blinking in direct stochastic optical reconstruction microscopy.

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