10 research outputs found

    Rational Design and Synthesis of Large Stokes Shift 2,6-Sulphur-Disubstituted BODIPYs for Cell Imaging

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    Five new disubstituted 2,6-thioaryl-BODIPY dyes were synthesized via selective aromatic electrophilic substitution from commercially available thiophenols. The analysis of the photophysical properties via absorption and emission spectroscopy showed unusually large Stokes shifts for BODIPY fluorophores (70–100 nm), which makes them suitable probes for bioimaging. Selected compounds were evaluated for labelling primary immune cells as well as different cancer cell lines using confocal fluorescence microscopy

    Water channels and zipper structures in Schiff base-like Cu(ii) and Ni(ii) mononuclear complexes

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    The crystal structures of four Cu(ii) complexes and one Ni(ii) complex bearing a square planar N2O2 coordination sphere are discussed. In all cases a distorted square planar coordination sphere is observed that is independent of the metal centre and the ligand and is only influenced by the packing of the molecules in the crystal. For the less distorted copper complexes metal-aromatic interactions are observed, while no significant intermolecular interactions are found for the nickel complexes. This can be explained by the different electronic character of Cu(ii) and Ni(ii) and is also reflected in the differences in the solvatochromism of these complexes. © the Partner Organisations 2014

    Fibre-optic based exploration of lung cancer autofluorescence using spectral fluorescence lifetime

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    Fibre-optic based time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy (TRFS) is an advanced spectroscopy technique that generates sample-specific spectral-temporal signature, characterising variations in fluorescence in real-time. As such, it can be used to interrogate tissue autofluorescence. Recent advancements in TRFS technology, including the development of devices that simultaneously measure high-resolution spectral and temporal fluorescence, paired with novel analysis methods extracting information from these multidimensional measurements effectively, provide additional insight into the underlying autofluorescence features of a sample. This study demonstrates, using both simulated data and endogenous fluorophores measured bench-side, that the shape of the spectral fluorescence lifetime, or fluorescence lifetimes estimated over high-resolution spectral channels across a broad range, is influenced by the relative abundance of underlying fluorophores in mixed systems and their respective environment. This study, furthermore, explores the properties of the spectral fluorescence lifetime in paired lung tissue deemed either abnormal or normal by pathologists. We observe that, on average, the shape of the spectral fluorescence lifetime at multiple locations sampled on 14 abnormal lung tissue, compared to multiple locations sampled on the respective paired normal lung tissue, shows more variability; and, while not statistically significant, the average spectral fluorescence lifetime in abnormal tissue is consistently lower over every wavelength than the normal tissue.</p

    Solvent-driven chirality for luminescent self-assembled structures: Experiments and theory

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    We describe, for a single platinum complex bearing a dipeptide moiety, a solvent-driven interconversion from twisted to straight micrometric assembled structures with different chirality. The photophysical and morphological properties of the aggregates have been investigated as well as the role of the media and concentration. A real-time visualization of the solvent-driven interconversion processes has been achieved by confocal microscopy. Finally, atomistic and coarse-grained simulations, providing results consistent with the experimental observations, allow to obtain a molecular-level insight into the interesting solvent-responsive behavior of this system
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