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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2010

Stable Synthetic Cationic Bacteriochlorins as Selective Antimicrobial Photosensitizers

Liyi Huang; Ying-Ying Huang; Pawel Mroz; George P. Tegos; Timur Zhiyentayev; Sulbha K. Sharma; Zongshun Lu; Thiagarajan Balasubramanian; Michael Krayer; Christian Ruzié; Eunkyung Yang; Hooi Ling Kee; Christine Kirmaier; James R. Diers; David F. Bocian; Dewey Holten; Jonathan S. Lindsey; Michael R. Hamblin

ABSTRACT Photodynamic inactivation is a rapidly developing antimicrobial treatment that employs a nontoxic photoactivatable dye or photosensitizer in combination with harmless visible light to generate reactive oxygen species that are toxic to cells. Tetrapyrroles (e.g., porphyrins, chlorins, bacteriochlorins) are a class of photosensitizers that exhibit promising characteristics to serve as broad-spectrum antimicrobials. In order to bind to and efficiently penetrate into all classes of microbial cells, tetrapyrroles should have structures that contain (i) one or more cationic charge(s) or (ii) a basic group. In this report, we investigate the use of new stable synthetic bacteriochlorins that have a strong absorption band in the range 720 to 740 nm, which is in the near-infrared spectral region. Four bacteriochlorins with 2, 4, or 6 quaternized ammonium groups or 2 basic amine groups were compared for light-mediated killing against a Gram-positive bacterium (Staphylococcus aureus), a Gram-negative bacterium (Escherichia coli), and a dimorphic fungal yeast (Candida albicans). Selectivity was assessed by determining phototoxicity against human HeLa cancer cells under the same conditions. All four compounds were highly active (6 logs of killing at 1 μM or less) against S. aureus and showed selectivity for bacteria over human cells. Increasing the cationic charge increased activity against E. coli. Only the compound with basic groups was highly active against C. albicans. Supporting photochemical and theoretical characterization studies indicate that (i) the four bacteriochlorins have comparable photophysical features in homogeneous solution and (ii) the anticipated redox characteristics do not correlate with cell-killing ability. These results support the interpretation that the disparate biological activities observed stem from cellular binding and localization effects rather than intrinsic electronic properties. These findings further establish cationic bacteriochlorins as extremely active and selective near-infrared activated antimicrobial photosensitizers, and the results provide fundamental information on structure-activity relationships for antimicrobial photosensitizers.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2011

Photophysical Properties and Electronic Structure of Stable, Tunable Synthetic Bacteriochlorins: Extending the Features of Native Photosynthetic Pigments

Eunkyung Yang; Christine Kirmaier; Michael Krayer; Masahiko Taniguchi; Han-Je Kim; James R. Diers; David F. Bocian; Jonathan S. Lindsey; Dewey Holten

Bacteriochlorins, which are tetrapyrrole macrocycles with two reduced pyrrole rings, are Natures near-infrared (NIR) absorbers (700-900 nm). The strong absorption in the NIR region renders bacteriochlorins excellent candidates for a variety of applications including solar light harvesting, flow cytometry, molecular imaging, and photodynamic therapy. Natural bacteriochlorins are inherently unstable due to oxidative conversion to the chlorin (one reduced pyrrole ring) or the porphyrin. The natural pigments are also only modestly amenable to synthetic manipulation, owing to a nearly full complement of substituents on the macrocycle. Recently, a new synthetic methodology has afforded access to stable synthetic bacteriochlorins wherein a wide variety of substituents can be appended to the macrocycle at preselected locations. Herein, the spectroscopic and photophysical properties of 33 synthetic bacteriochlorins are investigated. The NIR absorption bands of the chromophores range from ∼700 to ∼820 nm; the lifetimes of the lowest excited singlet state range from ∼2 to ∼6 ns; the fluorescence quantum yields range from ∼0.05 to ∼0.25; and the yield of the lowest triplet excited state is ∼0.5. The spectroscopic/photophysical studies of the bacteriochlorins are accompanied by density functional theory (DFT) calculations that probe the characteristics of the frontier molecular orbitals. The DFT calculations indicate that the impact of substituents on the spectral properties of the molecules derives primarily from effects on the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital. Collectively, the studies show how the palette of synthetic bacteriochlorins extends the properties of the native photosynthetic pigments (bacteriochlorophylls). The studies have also elucidated design principles for tuning the spectral and photophysical characteristics as required for a wide variety of photochemical applications.


The FASEB Journal | 2010

Stable synthetic bacteriochlorins overcome the resistance of melanoma to photodynamic therapy

Pawel Mroz; Ying-Ying Huang; Angelika Szokalska; Timur Zhiyentayev; Sahar Janjua; Artemissia-Phoebe A.-P. Nifli; Margaret E. Sherwood; Christian Ruzié; K. Eszter Borbas; Dazhong Fan; Michael Krayer; Thiagarajan Balasubramanian; Eunkyung Yang; Hooi Ling Kee; Christine Kirmaier; James R. Diers; David F. Bocian; Dewey Holten; Jonathan S. Lindsey; Michael R. Hamblin

Cutaneous malignant melanoma remains a therapeutic challenge, and patients with advanced disease have limited survival. Photodynamic therapy (PDT) has been successfully used to treat many malignancies, and it may show promise as an antimelanoma modality. However, high melanin levels in melanomas can adversely affect PDT effectiveness. Herein the extent of melanin contribution to melanoma resistance to PDT was investigated in a set of melanoma cell lines that markedly differ in the levels of pigmentation;3 new bacteriochlorins successfully overcame the resistance. Cell killing studies determined that bacteriochlorins are superior at (LD50≈0.1 µM) when compared with controls such as the FDA‐approved Photofrin (LD50≈10 µM) and clinically tested LuTex (LD50≈=1 µM). The melanin content affects PDT effectiveness, but the degree of reduction is significantly lower for bacteriochlorins than for Photofrin. Microscopy reveals that the least effective bacteriochlorin localizes predominantly in lysosomes, while the most effective one preferentially accumulates in mitochondria. Interestingly all bacteriochlorins accumulate in melanosomes, and subsequent illumination leads to melanosomal damage shown by electron microscopy. Fluorescent probes show that the most effective bacteriochlorin produces significantly higher levels of hydroxyl radicals, and this is consistent with the redox properties suggested by molecular‐orbital calculations. The best in vitro performing bacteriochlorin was tested in vivo in a mouse melanoma model using spectrally resolved fluorescence imaging and provided significant survival advantage with 20% of cures (P<0.01).—Mroz, P., Huang, Y.‐Y., Szokalska, A., Zhiyentayev, T., Janjua, S., Nifli, A.‐P., Sherwood, M. E., Ruzié, C., Borbas, K. E., Fan, D., Krayer, M., Balasubramanian, T., Yang, E., Kee, H. L., Kirmaier, C., Diers, J. R., Bocian, D. F., Holten, D., Lindsey, J. S., Hamblin, M. R. Stable synthetic bacteriochlorins overcome the resistance of melanoma to photodynamic therapy. FASEB J. 24, 3160–3170 (2010). www.fasebj.org


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2010

In Vitro Photodynamic Therapy and Quantitative Structure–Activity Relationship Studies with Stable Synthetic Near-Infrared-Absorbing Bacteriochlorin Photosensitizers

Ying-Ying Huang; Pawel Mroz; Timur Zhiyentayev; Sulbha K. Sharma; Thiagarajan Balasubramanian; Christian Ruzié; Michael Krayer; Dazhong Fan; K. Eszter Borbas; Eunkyung Yang; Hooi Ling Kee; Christine Kirmaier; James R. Diers; David F. Bocian; Dewey Holten; Jonathan S. Lindsey; Michael R. Hamblin

Photodynamic therapy (PDT) is a rapidly developing approach to treating cancer that combines harmless visible and near-infrared light with a nontoxic photoactivatable dye, which upon encounter with molecular oxygen generates the reactive oxygen species that are toxic to cancer cells. Bacteriochlorins are tetrapyrrole compounds with two reduced pyrrole rings in the macrocycle. These molecules are characterized by strong absorption features from 700 to >800 nm, which enable deep penetration into tissue. This report describes testing of 12 new stable synthetic bacteriochlorins for PDT activity. The 12 compounds possess a variety of peripheral substituents and are very potent in killing cancer cells in vitro after illumination. Quantitative structure-activity relationships were derived, and subcellular localization was determined. The most active compounds have both low dark toxicity and high phototoxicity. This combination together with near-infrared absorption gives these bacteriochlorins great potential as photosensitizers for treatment of cancer.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2012

Synthesis and physicochemical properties of metallobacteriochlorins.

Chih-Yuan Chen; Erjun Sun; Dazhong Fan; Masahiko Taniguchi; Brian E. McDowell; Eunkyung Yang; James R. Diers; David F. Bocian; Dewey Holten; Jonathan S. Lindsey

Access to metallobacteriochlorins is essential for investigation of a wide variety of fundamental photochemical processes, yet relatively few synthetic metallobacteriochlorins have been prepared. Members of a set of synthetic bacteriochlorins bearing 0-4 carbonyl groups (1, 2, or 4 carboethoxy substituents, or an annulated imide moiety) were examined under two conditions: (i) standard conditions for zincation of porphyrins [Zn(OAc)(2)·2H(2)O in N,N-dimethylformamide (DMF) at 60-80 °C], and (ii) treatment in tetrahydrofuran (THF) with a strong base [e.g., NaH or lithium diisopropylamide (LDA)] followed by a metal reagent MX(n). Zincation of bacteriochlorins that bear 2-4 carbonyl groups proceeded under the former method whereas those with 0-2 carbonyl groups proceeded with NaH or LDA/THF followed by Zn(OTf)(2). The scope of metalation (via NaH or LDA in THF) is as follows: (a) for bacteriochlorins that bear two electron-releasing aryl groups, M = Cu, Zn, Pd, and InCl (but not Mg, Al, Ni, Sn, or Au); (b) for bacteriochlorins that bear two carboethoxy groups, M = Ni, Cu, Zn, Pd, Cd, InCl, and Sn (but not Mg, Al, or Au); and (c) a bacteriochlorin with four carboethoxy groups was metalated with Mg (other metals were not examined). Altogether, 15 metallobacteriochlorins were isolated and characterized. Single-crystal X-ray analysis of 8,8,18,18-tetramethylbacteriochlorin reveals the core geometry provided by the four nitrogen atoms is rectangular; the difference in length of the two sides is ∼0.08 Å. Electronic characteristics of (metal-free) bacteriochlorins were probed through electrochemical measurements along with density functional theory calculation of the energies of the frontier molecular orbitals. The photophysical properties (fluorescence yields, triplet yields, singlet and triplet excited-state lifetimes) of the zinc bacteriochlorins are generally similar to those of the metal-free analogues, and to those of the native chromophores bacteriochlorophyll a and bacteriopheophytin a. The availability of diverse metallobacteriochlorins should prove useful in a variety of fundamental photochemical studies and applications.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2015

Extending the short and long wavelength limits of bacteriochlorin near-infrared absorption via dioxo- and bisimide-functionalization.

Pothiappan Vairaprakash; Eunkyung Yang; Tuba Sahin; Masahiko Taniguchi; Michael Krayer; James R. Diers; Alfred Wang; Dariusz M. Niedzwiedzki; Christine Kirmaier; Jonathan S. Lindsey; David F. Bocian; Dewey Holten

Six new bacteriochlorins expanding the range of the strong near-infrared (NIR) absorption (Qy band) to both shorter and longer wavelengths (∼690 to ∼900 nm) have been synthesized and characterized. The architectures include bacteriochlorin-bisimides that have six-membered imide rings spanning the 3,5- and 13,15-macrocycle positions or five-membered imide rings spanning the β-pyrrolic 2,3- and 12,13-positions. Both bisimide types absorb at significantly longer wavelength than the bacteriochlorin precursors (no fused rings), whereas oxo-groups at the 7- or 7,17-positions shift the Qy band to a new short wavelength limit. Surprisingly, bacteriochlorin-bisimides with five-membered β-pyrrolic-centered imide rings have a Qy band closer to that of six-membered bacteriochlorin-monoimides. However, the five-membered bisimides (versus the six-membered bacteriochlorin-monoimides) have significantly enhanced absorption intensity that is paralleled by an ∼2-fold higher fluorescence yield (∼0.16 vs ∼0.07) and longer singlet excited-state lifetime (∼4 ns vs ∼2 ns). The photophysical enhancements derive in part from mixing of the lowest unoccupied frontier molecular orbitals of the five-membered imide ring with those of the bacteriochlorin framework. In general, all of the new bacteriochlorins have excited-state lifetimes (1-4 ns) that are sufficiently long for use in molecular-based systems for photochemical applications.


Photochemistry and Photobiology | 2013

Molecular Electronic Tuning of Photosensitizers to Enhance Photodynamic Therapy: Synthetic Dicyanobacteriochlorins as a Case Study

Eunkyung Yang; James R. Diers; Ying-Ying Huang; Michael R. Hamblin; Jonathan S. Lindsey; David F. Bocian; Dewey Holten

Photophysical, photostability, electrochemical and molecular‐orbital characteristics are analyzed for a set of stable dicyanobacteriochlorins that are promising photosensitizers for photodynamic therapy (PDT). The bacteriochlorins are the parent compound (BC), dicyano derivative (NC)2BC and corresponding zinc (NC)2BC‐Zn and palladium chelate (NC)2BC‐Pd. The order of PDT activity against HeLa human cancer cells in vitro is (NC)2BC‐Pd > (NC)2BC > (NC)2BC‐Zn ≈ BC. The near‐infrared absorption feature of each dicyanobacteriochlorin is bathochromically shifted 35–50 nm (748–763 nm) from that for BC (713 nm). Intersystem crossing to the PDT‐active triplet excited state is essentially quantitative for (NC)2BC‐Pd. Phosphorescence from (NC)2BC‐Pd occurs at 1122 nm (1.1 eV). This value and the measured ground‐state redox potentials fix the triplet excited‐state redox properties, which underpin PDT activity via Type‐1 (electron transfer) pathways. A perhaps counterintuitive (but readily explicable) result is that of the three dicyanobacteriochlorins, the photosensitizer with the shortest triplet lifetime (7 μs), (NC)2BC‐Pd has the highest activity. Photostabilities of the dicyanobacteriochlorins and other bacteriochlorins studied recently are investigated and discussed in terms of four phenomena: aggregation, reduction, oxidation and chemical reaction. Collectively, the results and analysis provide fundamental insights concerning the molecular design of PDT agents.


ChemMedChem | 2012

Stable Synthetic Bacteriochlorins for Photodynamic Therapy: Role of Dicyano Peripheral Groups, Central Metal Substitution (2H, Zn, Pd), and Cremophor EL Delivery

Ying-Ying Huang; Thiagarajan Balasubramanian; Eunkyung Yang; Dianzhong Luo; James R. Diers; David F. Bocian; Jonathan S. Lindsey; Dewey Holten; Michael R. Hamblin

A series of four stable synthetic bacteriochlorins was tested in vitro in HeLa cells for their potential in photodynamic therapy (PDT). The parent bacteriochlorin (BC), dicyano derivative (NC)2BC and corresponding zinc chelate (NC)2BC–Zn and palladium chelate (NC)2BC–Pd were studied. Direct dilution of a solution of bacteriochlorin in an organic solvent (N,N‐dimethylacetamide) into serum‐containing medium was compared with the dilution of bacteriochlorin in Cremophor EL (CrEL; polyoxyethylene glycerol triricinoleate) micelles into the same medium. CrEL generally reduced aggregation (as indicated by absorption and fluorescence) and increased activity up to tenfold (depending on bacteriochlorin), although it decreased cellular uptake. The order of PDT activity against HeLa human cancer cells after 24 h incubation and illumination with 10 J cm−2 of near‐infrared (NIR) light is (NC)2BC–Pd (LD50=25 nM) > (NC)2BC > (NC)2BC–Zn ≈ BC. Subcellular localization was determined to be in the endoplasmic reticulum, mitochondria and lysosomes, depending on the bacteriochlorin. (NC)2BC–Pd showed PDT‐mediated damage to mitochondria and lysosomes, and the greatest production of hydroxyl radicals as determined using a hydroxyphenylfluorescein probe. The incorporation of cyano substituents provides an excellent motif for the enhancement of the photoactivity and photostability of bacteriochlorins as PDT photosensitizers.


New Journal of Chemistry | 2011

De novo synthesis and photophysical characterization of annulated bacteriochlorins. Mimicking and extending the properties of bacteriochlorophylls

Michael Krayer; Eunkyung Yang; James R. Diers; David F. Bocian; Dewey Holten; Jonathan S. Lindsey

Bacteriochlorophylls contain the bacteriochlorin chromophore and a fifth, five-membered oxopentano ring that encompasses positions 13–15 known as the “isocyclic” ring E. Such bacterio-131-oxophorbines have heretofore only been available in the naturally occurring compounds, and analogues bearing six-membered rings have only been available by derivatization of bacteriochlorophylls. A de novo route to synthetic bacteriochlorins, which bear a geminal dimethyl group in each pyrroline ring, has been extended to gain access to a bacterio-131-oxophorbine and bacteriochlorin-13,15-dicarboximides. The route relies on acid-catalyzed condensation of a dihydrodipyrrin-acetal to form the bacteriochlorin, which then is subjected to regioselective 15-bromination. Pd-mediated cyclization of the 15-bromobacteriochlorin bearing a 13-acetyl group (intramolecular α-arylation) or 13-ethoxycarbonyl group (carbamoylation and intramolecular imidation) gives the bacterio-131-oxophorbine or bacteriochlorin-13,15-dicarboximide, respectively. The resulting macrocycles exhibit absorption in the near-infrared spectral region (733–818 nm), which extends the spectral coverage beyond that obtained previously with synthetic bacteriochlorins that lack a fifth ring. The macrocycles also exhibit excited singlet-state lifetimes (1.9–4.6 ns) comparable to or longer than those of natural photosynthetic pigments. Density functional theory calculations predict that the bathochromically shifted absorption is primarily due to lowering of the energy of the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital. The new route complements existing semisynthetic routes and should enable fundamental spectroscopic studies and diverse photochemical applications.


Chemical Science | 2013

Palette of lipophilic bioconjugatable bacteriochlorins for construction of biohybrid light-harvesting architectures

Kanumuri Ramesh Reddy; Jianbing Jiang; Michael Krayer; Michelle A. Harris; Joseph W. Springer; Eunkyung Yang; Jieying Jiao; Dariusz M. Niedzwiedzki; Dinesh R. Pandithavidana; Pamela S. Parkes-Loach; Christine Kirmaier; Paul A. Loach; David F. Bocian; Dewey Holten; Jonathan S. Lindsey

The challenge of creating both pigment building blocks and scaffolding to organize a large number of such pigments has long constituted a central impediment to the construction of artificial light-harvesting architectures. Light-harvesting (LH) antennas in photosynthetic bacteria are formed in a two-tiered self-assembly process wherein (1) a peptide dyad containing two bacteriochlorophyll a molecules forms, and (2) the dyads associate to form cyclic oligomers composed of 8 or 9 dyads in LH2 and 15 or 16 in LH1 of purple photosynthetic bacteria. While such antenna systems generally have near-quantitative transfer of excitation energy among pigments, only a fraction of the solar spectrum is typically absorbed. A platform architecture for study of light-harvesting phenomena has been developed that employs native photosynthetic peptide analogs, native bacteriochlorophyll a, and synthetic near-infrared-absorbing bacteriochlorins. Herein, the syntheses of 10 lipophilic bacteriochlorins are reported, of which 7 contain bioconjugatable handles (maleimide, iodoacetamide, formyl, carboxylic acid) for attachment to the peptide chassis. The bioconjugatable bacteriochlorins typically exhibit a long-wavelength absorption band in the range 710 to 820 nm, fluorescence yield of 0.1–0.2, and lifetime of the lowest singlet excited state of 2–5 ns. The α-helical structure of the native-like peptide is retained upon conjugation with a synthetic bacteriochlorin, as judged by single-reflection infrared studies. Static and time-resolved optical studies of the oligomeric biohybrid architectures in aqueous detergent solution reveal efficient (∼90%) excitation energy transfer from the attached bacteriochlorin to the native-like bacteriochlorophyll a sites. The biohybrid light-harvesting architectures thus exploit the self-constituting features of the natural systems yet enable versatile incorporation of members from a palette of synthetic chromophores, thereby opening the door to a wide variety of studies in artificial photosynthesis.

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Dewey Holten

Washington University in St. Louis

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Jonathan S. Lindsey

North Carolina State University

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James R. Diers

University of California

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Christine Kirmaier

Washington University in St. Louis

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Michael Krayer

North Carolina State University

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Dariusz M. Niedzwiedzki

Washington University in St. Louis

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Hooi Ling Kee

Washington University in St. Louis

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Masahiko Taniguchi

North Carolina State University

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