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Amphiphilic Tetraphenylethene-Based Pyridinium Salt for Selective Cell-Membrane Imaging and Room-Light-Induced Special Reactive Oxygen Species Generation

  • Weijie Zhang
  • , Yuhua Huang
  • , Yilong Chen
  • , Engui Zhao
  • , Yuning Hong
  • , Sijie Chen
  • , Jacky W.Y. Lam
  • , Yuncong Chen
  • , Jianquan Hou*
  • , Ben Zhong Tang
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • The First Affiliated Hospital of Soochow University
  • Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
  • Dongguan University of Technology
  • La Trobe University
  • South China University of Technology

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The cell membrane is the protecting frontier of cells, which is crucial for maintaining cell integrity, and has a close relationship with cell growth and death. There is a growing need for cell membrane imaging and monitoring in both living and dying cells. Herein, we report a new amphiphilic tetraphenylethene-based pyridinium salt (TPE-MEM) with aggregation-induced emission features for discriminatory cell membrane imaging. The fluorogenic probe with high yield was synthesized following asymmetric McMurry reaction, Williamson ether synthesis reaction, Suzuki coupling, and aldol condensation between a double-charged pyridinium salt and hexyloxytetraphenylethene benzaldehyde. TPE-MEM shows good water solubility, biocompatibility, and cell membrane specificity. Interestingly, a reactive oxygen species (ROS) is produced by the molecule (TPE-MEM) under room-light irradiation, which could destroy the integrity of the plasma membrane and cause cell necrosis. This enables a visible observation of cell necrosis and the phototherapeutic effect under a mild condition. Preliminary animal investigations also demonstrated the photodynamic therapy (PDT) effectiveness of TPE-MEM in tumor growth inhibition. We conclude that TPE-MEM is potentially a cell membrane-selective photosensitizer for PDT and it is worthy of further exploration of the phototherapeutic effect on animals systematically.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)10567-10577
Number of pages11
JournalACS Applied Materials and Interfaces
Volume11
Issue number11
DOIs
StatePublished - 20 Mar 2019
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • aggregation-induced emission (AIE)
  • bioimaging
  • cell-membrane imaging
  • photodynamic therapy (PDT)
  • reactive oxygen species (ROS)

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