CAPRYDAA, an anthracene dye analog to LAURDAN: a comparative study using cuvette and microscopy
Author
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Castro Castillo, Vicente
Author
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Gajardo, Javier
Author
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Sandoval Altamirano, Catalina
Author
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Gratton, Enrico
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Sánchez, Susana
Author
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Malacrida, Leonel
Author
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Gunther, German
Admission date
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2020-06-03T14:46:11Z
Available date
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2020-06-03T14:46:11Z
Publication date
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2020
Cita de ítem
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J. Mater. Chem. B, 2020, 8, 88
es_ES
Identifier
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10.1039/c9tb01738k
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/175170
Abstract
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We synthesized an anthracene derivative with solvatochromic properties to be used as a molecular probe for membrane dynamics and supramolecular organization. A nine carbon atom acyl chain and a dimethylamino substitution were introduced at positions 2 and 6 of the anthracene ring, respectively. This derivative, 2-nonanoyl-6-(dimethylamino)anthracene (termed CAPRYDAA), is a molecular probe designed to mimic the well-known membrane probe LAURDAN's location and response in the lipid membranes. Due to the larger distance between the electron donor and acceptor groups, its absorption and emission bands are red-shifted according to the polarity of the media. The photophysical behavior of CAPRYDAA was measured in homogeneous media, synthetic bilayer and cells, both in a cuvette and in a fluorescence microscope, using one and two-photon excitation. Our results show a comparable physicochemical behavior of CAPRYDAA with LAURDAN, but with the advantage of using visible light (488 nm) as an excitation source. CAPRYDAA was also excitable by two-photon laser sources, making it easy to combine CAPRYDAA with either blue or red emission probes. In GUVs or cells, CAPRYDAA can discriminate the lipid phases and liquid-liquid phase heterogeneity. This new membrane probe shows the bathochromic properties of the PRODAN-based probes designed by Weber, overcoming the need for UV or two-photon excitation and facilitating the studies on the membrane properties using regular confocal microscopes.