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  4. Fluorescent styryl pyridine-N-oxide probes for imaging lipid droplets
 
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Fluorescent styryl pyridine-N-oxide probes for imaging lipid droplets

Source
Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry
ISSN
14770520
Date Issued
2023-10-03
Author(s)
Dubey, Yogesh
Mahalingavelar, Paramasivam
Rajput, Deeksha
Shewale, Dipeshwari J.
Soppina, Virupakshi
Kanvah, Sriram  
DOI
10.1039/d3ob01365k
Volume
21
Issue
41
Abstract
Lipid droplets (LDs) have emerged as major regulators of cellular metabolism, encompassing lipid storage, membrane synthesis, viral replication, and protein degradation. Exclusive studies have suggested a direct link between LDs and cancer, as a notable abundance of LDs is found in cancerous cells. Therefore, monitoring the location, distribution, and movements of LDs is of paramount importance for understanding their involvement in biological processes. To target LDs, we designed and synthesized fluorophores with a styryl scaffold bearing electron-donating amino groups and pyridine-N-oxide, a zwitterionic acceptor moiety. We explored their photophysical properties in various solvents and conducted systematic DFT calculations on the synthesized fluorescent molecules, comparing them with neutral pyridine and cationic pyridinium styryl dyes. The results demonstrate that diphenylaminostyryl pyridine-N-oxide (TNO) shows excellent imaging of LDs, in contrast to the behavior of cationic styrylpyridinium (TNC), which primarily localizes within the mitochondria. Notably, pyridine N-oxide offers several benefits: an increased dipole moment facilitating charge separation between donors and acceptors, substantial HOMO and LUMO stabilization, improved water solubility, favorable redox properties, and bathochromic-shifted absorption/emission spectra, showing promise as a fluorescent tool for probing the cellular-biological realm.
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URI
https://d8.irins.org/handle/IITG2025/26611
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