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Keywords = dimeric cyanine dye

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17 pages, 10593 KiB  
Article
Asymmetric Monomethine Cyanine Dyes with Hydrophobic Functionalities for Fluorescent Intercalator Displacement Assay
by Sonia Ilieva, Nadezhda Bozova, Miroslav Rangelov, Nadezhda Todorova, Aleksey Vasilev and Diana Cheshmedzhieva
Molecules 2024, 29(1), 114; https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules29010114 - 23 Dec 2023
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1908
Abstract
A new green procedure has been applied for the synthesis and purification of asymmetric monomethine cyanine dyes. The photophysical properties of the newly synthesized compounds have been examined by combined application of spectroscopic and theoretical methods. The structural characteristics of the molecules and [...] Read more.
A new green procedure has been applied for the synthesis and purification of asymmetric monomethine cyanine dyes. The photophysical properties of the newly synthesized compounds have been examined by combined application of spectroscopic and theoretical methods. The structural characteristics of the molecules and dimer formation were characterized by quantum chemical computation and juxtaposed to the aggregachromism in UV/Vis spectra. The applicability of the dyes as fluorogenic nucleic acid probes has been proven by fluorescence titration, and their binding constants have been calculated. The mode of ligand–dsDNA/RNA interaction was rationalized by means of CD spectroscopy, molecular docking analysis, and fluorescent intercalator displacement experiments. Full article
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26 pages, 2648 KiB  
Article
Clickable C-Glycosyl Scaffold for the Development of a Dual Fluorescent and [18F]fluorinated Cyanine-Containing Probe and Preliminary In Vitro/Vivo Evaluation by Fluorescence Imaging
by Julen Ariztia, Kamal Jouad, Valérie Jouan-Hureaux, Julien Pierson, Charlotte Collet, Bertrand Kuhnast, Katalin Selmeczi, Cédric Boura, Sandrine Lamandé-Langle and Nadia Pellegrini Moïse
Pharmaceuticals 2022, 15(12), 1490; https://doi.org/10.3390/ph15121490 - 29 Nov 2022
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 2998
Abstract
Considering the individual characteristics of positron emission tomography (PET) and optical imaging (OI) in terms of sensitivity, spatial resolution, and tissue penetration, the development of dual imaging agents for bimodal PET/OI imaging is a growing field. A current major breakthrough in this field [...] Read more.
Considering the individual characteristics of positron emission tomography (PET) and optical imaging (OI) in terms of sensitivity, spatial resolution, and tissue penetration, the development of dual imaging agents for bimodal PET/OI imaging is a growing field. A current major breakthrough in this field is the design of monomolecular agent displaying both a radioisotope for PET and a fluorescent dye for OI. We took advantage of the multifunctionalities allowed by a clickable C-glycosyl scaffold to gather the different elements. We describe, for the first time, the synthesis of a cyanine-based dual PET/OI imaging probe based on a versatile synthetic strategy and its direct radiofluorination via [18F]F-C bond formation. The non-radioactive dual imaging probe coupled with two c(RGDfK) peptides was evaluated in vitro and in vivo in fluorescence imaging. The binding on αvβ3 integrin (IC50 = 16 nM) demonstrated the efficiency of the dimeric structure and PEG linkers in maintaining the affinity. In vivo fluorescence imaging of U-87 MG engrafted nude mice showed a high tumor uptake (40- and 100-fold increase for orthotopic and ectopic brain tumors, respectively, compared to healthy brain). In vitro and in vivo evaluations and resection of the ectopic tumor demonstrated the potential of the conjugate in glioblastoma cancer diagnosis and image-guided surgery. Full article
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15 pages, 4835 KiB  
Article
Theoretical Modeling of Absorption and Fluorescent Characteristics of Cyanine Dyes
by Sonia Ilieva, Meglena Kandinska, Aleksey Vasilev and Diana Cheshmedzhieva
Photochem 2022, 2(1), 202-216; https://doi.org/10.3390/photochem2010015 - 4 Mar 2022
Cited by 8 | Viewed by 3505
Abstract
The rational design of cyanine dyes for the fine-tuning of their photophysical properties undoubtedly requires theoretical considerations for understanding and predicting their absorption and fluorescence characteristics. The present study aims to assess the applicability and accuracy of several DFT functionals for calculating the [...] Read more.
The rational design of cyanine dyes for the fine-tuning of their photophysical properties undoubtedly requires theoretical considerations for understanding and predicting their absorption and fluorescence characteristics. The present study aims to assess the applicability and accuracy of several DFT functionals for calculating the absorption and fluorescence maxima of monomethine cyanine dyes. Ten DFT functionals and different basis sets were examined to select the proper theoretical model for calculating the electronic transitions of eight representative molecules from this class of compounds. The self-aggregation of the dyes was also considered. The pure exchange functionals (M06L, HFS, HFB, B97D) combined with the triple-zeta basis set 6-311+G(2d,p) showed the best performance during the theoretical estimation of the absorption and fluorescent characteristics of cyanine dyes. Full article
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13 pages, 3329 KiB  
Article
Aggregate Formation of Boron-Containing Molecules in Thermal Vacuum Deposited Films
by Oleksandr Navozenko, Valeriy Yashchuk, Oleksiy Kachkovsky, Dalius Gudeika, Rita Butkute, Yuriy Slominskii and Volodymyr Azovskyi
Materials 2021, 14(19), 5615; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma14195615 - 27 Sep 2021
Viewed by 2005
Abstract
The spectral properties of new boron-containing dyes were studied. One-component (pure dyes) and composite “Alq3+dye” thin films were fabricated using the thermal vacuum deposition method. The positions of the transmission spectra maxima in a one-component film are different for different film [...] Read more.
The spectral properties of new boron-containing dyes were studied. One-component (pure dyes) and composite “Alq3+dye” thin films were fabricated using the thermal vacuum deposition method. The positions of the transmission spectra maxima in a one-component film are different for different film thicknesses. The best correlation of the maxima positions of the dye transmission spectra in solid and liquid solutions was observed for thicknesses of films close to a few (up to 10) monolayers. On the other hand, the absorption spectra maxima positions of one-component dye films (upper 10 nm) and composite films with high concentration, did not match the corresponding positions of absorption spectra maxima recorded in solutions. Comparison of the absorption spectra in one-component dye films and in solutions indicates the presence of both monomers and their aggregates in one-component films (contrary to solutions where such processes of aggregation do not take place, even at very high concentrations). Simultaneously with aggregation manifestation in the absorption spectra, the intensity of fluorescence of one-component dye films dramatically decreases. A quantum chemical simulation of the possible relative arrangement of two dye molecules indicates that the most possible of the simplest types of aggregates are physical dimers. Films of practical importance (due to efficient energy transfer from host to guest molecules when all singlet excitons are captured) possess a high quantum yield of fluorescence when reaching an impurity concentration of a few percent (aggregation does not take place yet). Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Organic Electronics: Synthesis, Properties, and Applications)
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20 pages, 5405 KiB  
Article
Polycationic Monomeric and Homodimeric Asymmetric Monomethine Cyanine Dyes with Hydroxypropyl Functionality—Strong Affinity Nucleic Acids Binders
by Ivana Mikulin, Ivana Ljubić, Ivo Piantanida, Aleksey Vasilev, Mihail Mondeshki, Meglena Kandinska, Lidija Uzelac, Irena Martin-Kleiner, Marijeta Kralj and Lidija-Marija Tumir
Biomolecules 2021, 11(8), 1075; https://doi.org/10.3390/biom11081075 - 21 Jul 2021
Cited by 7 | Viewed by 3178
Abstract
New analogs of the commercial asymmetric monomethine cyanine dyes thiazole orange (TO) and thiazole orange homodimer (TOTO) with hydroxypropyl functionality were synthesized and their properties in the presence of different nucleic acids were studied. The novel compounds showed strong, micromolar and submicromolar affinities [...] Read more.
New analogs of the commercial asymmetric monomethine cyanine dyes thiazole orange (TO) and thiazole orange homodimer (TOTO) with hydroxypropyl functionality were synthesized and their properties in the presence of different nucleic acids were studied. The novel compounds showed strong, micromolar and submicromolar affinities to all examined DNA ds-polynucleotides and poly rA–poly rU. The compounds studied showed selectivity towards GC-DNA base pairs over AT-DNA, which included both binding affinity and a strong fluorescence response. CD titrations showed aggregation along the polynucleotide with well-defined supramolecular chirality. The single dipyridinium-bridged dimer showed intercalation at low dye-DNA/RNA ratios. All new cyanine dyes showed potent micromolar antiproliferative activity against cancer cell lines, making them promising theranostic agents. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Polynucleotides)
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8 pages, 2096 KiB  
Article
Disassembly of Dimeric Cyanine Dye Supramolecular Assembly by Tetramolecular G-quadruplex Dependence on Linker Length and Layers of G-quartet
by Lijia Yu, Yansong Zhang, Chunguang Ding and Xiaodong Shi
Molecules 2019, 24(10), 2015; https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules24102015 - 27 May 2019
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 3624
Abstract
Cyanine dyes have been widely applied in various biological systems owing to their specific photochemical properties. Assembly and disassembly process of cyanine dyes were constructed and regulated by special biomolecules. In this paper, dimeric cyanine dyes with different repeat units (oligo-oxyethylene) in linker [...] Read more.
Cyanine dyes have been widely applied in various biological systems owing to their specific photochemical properties. Assembly and disassembly process of cyanine dyes were constructed and regulated by special biomolecules. In this paper, dimeric cyanine dyes with different repeat units (oligo-oxyethylene) in linker (TC-Pn) (n = 3–6) were found to form H-aggregates or mixture aggregates in PBS. These aggregates could be disassembled into dimer and/or monomer by (TGnT) tetramolecular G-quadruplexes (n = 3–6, 8), which were affected by the linker length of dimeric cyanine dyes and layers of G-quartets. The 1H-NMR titration results suggest that the binding mode of dimeric cyanine dye with TGnT might be on both ends—stacking like a clip. This binding mode could clearly explain that matching structures between dimeric cyanine dyes and TGnT quadruplexes could regulate the disassembly properties of aggregates. These results could provide clues for the development of highly specific G-quadruplex probes. Full article
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