Cargando…

Bright and sensitive ratiometric fluorescent probe enabling endogenous FA imaging and mechanistic exploration of indirect oxidative damage due to FA in various living systems

As a notorious toxin, formaldehyde (FA) poses an immense threat to human health. Aberrantly elevated FA levels lead to serious pathologies, including organ damage, neurodegeneration, and cancer. Unfortunately, current techniques limit FA imaging to general comparative studies, instead of a mechanist...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Dou, Kun, Chen, Guang, Yu, Fabiao, Liu, Yuxia, Chen, Lingxin, Cao, Ziping, Chen, Tao, Li, Yulin, You, Jinmao
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Royal Society of Chemistry 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5674201/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29163922
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c7sc03719h
_version_ 1783276726678192128
author Dou, Kun
Chen, Guang
Yu, Fabiao
Liu, Yuxia
Chen, Lingxin
Cao, Ziping
Chen, Tao
Li, Yulin
You, Jinmao
author_facet Dou, Kun
Chen, Guang
Yu, Fabiao
Liu, Yuxia
Chen, Lingxin
Cao, Ziping
Chen, Tao
Li, Yulin
You, Jinmao
author_sort Dou, Kun
collection PubMed
description As a notorious toxin, formaldehyde (FA) poses an immense threat to human health. Aberrantly elevated FA levels lead to serious pathologies, including organ damage, neurodegeneration, and cancer. Unfortunately, current techniques limit FA imaging to general comparative studies, instead of a mechanistic exploration of its biological role, and this is presumably due to the lack of robust molecular tools for reporting FA in living systems. More importantly, despite being reductive, FA, however, can induce oxidative damage to organisms, thus providing a challenge to the mechanistic study of FA using fluorescence imaging. Herein, we presented the design and multi-application of a bright sensitive ratiometric fluorescent probe 1-(4-(1H-phenanthro[9,10-d]imidazol-2-yl)phenyl) but-3-en-1-amine (PIPBA). With a π-extended phenylphenanthroimidazole fluorophore and an allylamine group, PIPBA exhibited high quantum yield (φ = 0.62) in blue fluorescent emission and selective reactivity toward FA. When sensing FA, PIPBA transformed to PIBE, which is a product capable of releasing bright green fluorescence (φ = 0.51) with its enhanced intramolecular charge transfer (ICT). Transformation of PIPBA to PIBE contributed to 80 nm of red shift in emission wavelength and a highly sensitive ratiometric response (92.2-fold), as well as a quite low detection limit (0.84 μM). PIPBA was successfully applied to various living systems, realizing, for the first time, ratiometric quantification (in cells), in vivo imaging (zebrafish), and living tissue imaging (vivisectional mouse under anaesthetic) of endogenous FA that was spontaneously generated by biological systems. Furthermore, with the aid of PIPBA, we obtained visual evidence for the oxidative damage of FA in both HeLa cells and renal tissue of a living mouse. The results demonstrated that FA exerted indirect oxidative damage by interacting with free radicals, thus producing more oxidizing species, which eventually caused aggravated oxidative damage to the organism. The indirect oxidative damage due to FA could be alleviated by an exogenous or endogenous antioxidant. The excellent behaviors of PIPBA demonstrate that a chemical probe can detect endogenous FA in cells/tissue/vivo, promising to be an effective tool for further exploration of the biological mechanism of FA in living systems.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-5674201
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2017
publisher Royal Society of Chemistry
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-56742012017-11-21 Bright and sensitive ratiometric fluorescent probe enabling endogenous FA imaging and mechanistic exploration of indirect oxidative damage due to FA in various living systems Dou, Kun Chen, Guang Yu, Fabiao Liu, Yuxia Chen, Lingxin Cao, Ziping Chen, Tao Li, Yulin You, Jinmao Chem Sci Chemistry As a notorious toxin, formaldehyde (FA) poses an immense threat to human health. Aberrantly elevated FA levels lead to serious pathologies, including organ damage, neurodegeneration, and cancer. Unfortunately, current techniques limit FA imaging to general comparative studies, instead of a mechanistic exploration of its biological role, and this is presumably due to the lack of robust molecular tools for reporting FA in living systems. More importantly, despite being reductive, FA, however, can induce oxidative damage to organisms, thus providing a challenge to the mechanistic study of FA using fluorescence imaging. Herein, we presented the design and multi-application of a bright sensitive ratiometric fluorescent probe 1-(4-(1H-phenanthro[9,10-d]imidazol-2-yl)phenyl) but-3-en-1-amine (PIPBA). With a π-extended phenylphenanthroimidazole fluorophore and an allylamine group, PIPBA exhibited high quantum yield (φ = 0.62) in blue fluorescent emission and selective reactivity toward FA. When sensing FA, PIPBA transformed to PIBE, which is a product capable of releasing bright green fluorescence (φ = 0.51) with its enhanced intramolecular charge transfer (ICT). Transformation of PIPBA to PIBE contributed to 80 nm of red shift in emission wavelength and a highly sensitive ratiometric response (92.2-fold), as well as a quite low detection limit (0.84 μM). PIPBA was successfully applied to various living systems, realizing, for the first time, ratiometric quantification (in cells), in vivo imaging (zebrafish), and living tissue imaging (vivisectional mouse under anaesthetic) of endogenous FA that was spontaneously generated by biological systems. Furthermore, with the aid of PIPBA, we obtained visual evidence for the oxidative damage of FA in both HeLa cells and renal tissue of a living mouse. The results demonstrated that FA exerted indirect oxidative damage by interacting with free radicals, thus producing more oxidizing species, which eventually caused aggravated oxidative damage to the organism. The indirect oxidative damage due to FA could be alleviated by an exogenous or endogenous antioxidant. The excellent behaviors of PIPBA demonstrate that a chemical probe can detect endogenous FA in cells/tissue/vivo, promising to be an effective tool for further exploration of the biological mechanism of FA in living systems. Royal Society of Chemistry 2017-11-01 2017-09-22 /pmc/articles/PMC5674201/ /pubmed/29163922 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c7sc03719h Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2017 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Chemistry
Dou, Kun
Chen, Guang
Yu, Fabiao
Liu, Yuxia
Chen, Lingxin
Cao, Ziping
Chen, Tao
Li, Yulin
You, Jinmao
Bright and sensitive ratiometric fluorescent probe enabling endogenous FA imaging and mechanistic exploration of indirect oxidative damage due to FA in various living systems
title Bright and sensitive ratiometric fluorescent probe enabling endogenous FA imaging and mechanistic exploration of indirect oxidative damage due to FA in various living systems
title_full Bright and sensitive ratiometric fluorescent probe enabling endogenous FA imaging and mechanistic exploration of indirect oxidative damage due to FA in various living systems
title_fullStr Bright and sensitive ratiometric fluorescent probe enabling endogenous FA imaging and mechanistic exploration of indirect oxidative damage due to FA in various living systems
title_full_unstemmed Bright and sensitive ratiometric fluorescent probe enabling endogenous FA imaging and mechanistic exploration of indirect oxidative damage due to FA in various living systems
title_short Bright and sensitive ratiometric fluorescent probe enabling endogenous FA imaging and mechanistic exploration of indirect oxidative damage due to FA in various living systems
title_sort bright and sensitive ratiometric fluorescent probe enabling endogenous fa imaging and mechanistic exploration of indirect oxidative damage due to fa in various living systems
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5674201/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29163922
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c7sc03719h
work_keys_str_mv AT doukun brightandsensitiveratiometricfluorescentprobeenablingendogenousfaimagingandmechanisticexplorationofindirectoxidativedamageduetofainvariouslivingsystems
AT chenguang brightandsensitiveratiometricfluorescentprobeenablingendogenousfaimagingandmechanisticexplorationofindirectoxidativedamageduetofainvariouslivingsystems
AT yufabiao brightandsensitiveratiometricfluorescentprobeenablingendogenousfaimagingandmechanisticexplorationofindirectoxidativedamageduetofainvariouslivingsystems
AT liuyuxia brightandsensitiveratiometricfluorescentprobeenablingendogenousfaimagingandmechanisticexplorationofindirectoxidativedamageduetofainvariouslivingsystems
AT chenlingxin brightandsensitiveratiometricfluorescentprobeenablingendogenousfaimagingandmechanisticexplorationofindirectoxidativedamageduetofainvariouslivingsystems
AT caoziping brightandsensitiveratiometricfluorescentprobeenablingendogenousfaimagingandmechanisticexplorationofindirectoxidativedamageduetofainvariouslivingsystems
AT chentao brightandsensitiveratiometricfluorescentprobeenablingendogenousfaimagingandmechanisticexplorationofindirectoxidativedamageduetofainvariouslivingsystems
AT liyulin brightandsensitiveratiometricfluorescentprobeenablingendogenousfaimagingandmechanisticexplorationofindirectoxidativedamageduetofainvariouslivingsystems
AT youjinmao brightandsensitiveratiometricfluorescentprobeenablingendogenousfaimagingandmechanisticexplorationofindirectoxidativedamageduetofainvariouslivingsystems