Enzyme-assisted cell photosensitization: a proposal for an efficient approach to tumor therapy and diagnosis. The rose bengal fluorogenic substrate
Autor: | P. Lo Nostro, P. Balzarini, Riccardo Pratesi, D. Locatelli, Monica Monici, Anna Cleta Croce, Piero Baglioni, G. Bottiroli |
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Rok vydání: | 1997 |
Předmět: |
Fluorophore
Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Hydrolases medicine.medical_treatment Photodynamic therapy Biochemistry Catalysis chemistry.chemical_compound Neoplasms Spectroscopy Fourier Transform Infrared Rose bengal medicine Tumor Cells Cultured Animals Photosensitizer Physical and Theoretical Chemistry Fluorescent Dyes chemistry.chemical_classification Rose Bengal Photosensitizing Agents Singlet oxygen Hydrolysis Esterases Substrate (chemistry) Acetylation General Medicine Rats Enzyme chemistry Photochemotherapy Intracellular |
Zdroj: | Scopus-Elsevier |
ISSN: | 0031-8655 |
Popis: | — Rose bengal, a xanthene derivative among the most efficient producer of singlet oxygen, was submitted to a chemical modification consisting in the introduction of an acetate group into the aromatic ring fluorophore structure. The acetate group acts as a quencher, thus inactivating both fluorescence and photosensitization properties of the molecule. In the modified structure, rose bengal acts as a fluorogenic substrate giving rise to the cellular reaction termed fluorochromasia. The acetate group is recognized by a carboxylic esterase activity that splits it. Removal of the quencher group results in restoring the native structure of photosensitizer inside the cells. The intracellular turnover of rose bengal acetate was studied in rat glioma-derived cultured cells, in terms of the balance of the processes of influx and enzyme hydrolysis of the fl0075 orogenic substrate, and of the efflux of the fluorescent product. A large intracellular accumulation of photosensitizer is obtained when treatments are performed with the fluorogenic substrate, even at the drug concentration at which rose bengal does not enter the cells. The intracellular localization allows rose bengal to exert a more effective photosensitization effect. Provided that the quencher group is selected according to the metabolic properties of the tumor cells, the use of fluorogenic substrates as photosensitizer precursors could improve fluorescence diagnosis and the photodynamic therapy of tumors, exploiting the biological properties that distinguish pathological from normal conditions. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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