Cell-penetrating metal complex optical probes: Targeted and responsive systems based on lanthanide luminescence

Craig P. Montgomery, Benjamin S. Murray, Elizabeth J. New, Robert Pal, David Parker*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articlepeer-review

671 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

To understand better the structure and function of biological systems, cell biologists and biochemists would like to have methods that minimally perturb living systems. The development of emissive optical probes is essential for improving our observation of intracellular signaling and recognition processes. Following excitation of the probe, photons emitted from the probe may be observed by spectroscopy or microscopy and encode information about their environments in their energy, lifetime, and polarization. Such optical probes may be based on organic fluorophores, quantum dots, recombinant proteins, or emissive metal complexes.

In this Account, we trace the emergence of lanthanide coordination complexes as emissive optical probes. These probes benefit from sharp emission bands and long lifetimes. We can design these complexes to report on the concentration of key biochemical variables by modulation of spectral form, lifetime, or circular polarization. These properties allow us to apply ratiometric methods of analysis in spectroscopy or microscopy to report on local pH, pM (M = Ca, Zn), or the concentration of certain anionic metabolites, such as citrate, lactate, bicarbonate, or urate. For optical microscopy studies in living cells, these probes must be cell-permeable and, ideally, should localize in a given cell organelle. We undertook systematic studies of more than 60 emissive complexes, examining the time dependence of cellular uptake and compartmentalization, cellular toxicity, protein affinity, and quenching sensitivity. These results and their relationship to probe structure have allowed us to identify certain structure−activity relationships. The nature and linkage mode of the integral sensitizing group—introduced to harvest incident light efficiently—is of primary importance in determining protein affinity and cellular uptake and trafficking. In many cases, uptake may occur via macropinocytosis. We have defined three main classes of behavior: complexes exhibit predominant localization profiles in protein-rich regions (nucleoli/ribosomes), in cellular mitochondria, or in endosomes/lysosomes. Therefore, these systems offer considerable promise as intracellular optical probes, amenable to single- or two-photon excitation, that may report on the local ionic composition of living cells subjected to differing environmental stresses.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)925-937
Number of pages13
JournalAccounts of Chemical Research
Volume42
Issue number7
Early online date3 Feb 2009
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 21 Jul 2009

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