Luminescent pyrenyl-GNA nucleosides: synthesis, photophysics and confocal microscopy studies in cancer HeLa cells.
Cell Survival
/ drug effects
Circular Dichroism
Crystallography, X-Ray
Density Functional Theory
Fluorescent Dyes
/ chemical synthesis
Glycols
/ chemistry
HeLa Cells
Humans
Microscopy, Confocal
Molecular Conformation
Nucleic Acids
/ chemistry
Nucleosides
/ chemical synthesis
Pyrenes
/ chemistry
Stereoisomerism
Journal
Photochemical & photobiological sciences : Official journal of the European Photochemistry Association and the European Society for Photobiology
ISSN: 1474-9092
Titre abrégé: Photochem Photobiol Sci
Pays: England
ID NLM: 101124451
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
09 Oct 2019
09 Oct 2019
Historique:
pubmed:
14
8
2019
medline:
30
11
2019
entrez:
14
8
2019
Statut:
ppublish
Résumé
Glycol nucleic acids (GNA) are synthetic genetic-like polymers with an acyclic three-carbon propylene glycol phosphodiester backbone. Here, synthesis, luminescence properties, circular dichroism (CD) spectra, and confocal microscopy speciation studies of (R,S) and (S,R) pyrenyl-GNA (pyr-GNA) nucleosides are reported in HeLa cells. Enantiomerically pure nucleosides were obtained by a Sharpless asymmetric dihydroxylation reaction followed by semi-preparative high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) separation using Amylose-2 as the chiral stationary phase. The enantiomeric relationship between stereoisomers was confirmed by CD spectra, and the absolute configurations were assigned based on experimental and theoretical CD spectra comparisons. The pyr-GNA nucleosides were not cytotoxic against human cervical (HeLa) cancer cells and thus were utilized as luminescent probes in the imaging of these cells with confocal microscopy. Cellular staining patterns were identical for both enantiomers in HeLa cells. Compounds showed no photocytotoxic effect and were localized in the lipid membranes of the mitochondria, in cellular vesicles and in other lipid cellular compartments. The overall distribution of the pyrene and pyrenyl-GNA nucleosides inside the living HeLa cells differed, since the former compound gives a more granular staining pattern and the latter a more diffuse one.
Substances chimiques
Fluorescent Dyes
0
Glycols
0
Nucleic Acids
0
Nucleosides
0
Pyrenes
0
pyrene
9E0T7WFW93
Types de publication
Journal Article
Langues
eng
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM