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Dive into the research topics where Fábio A. Schaberle is active.

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Featured researches published by Fábio A. Schaberle.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2014

Photodynamic Therapy Efficacy Enhanced by Dynamics: The Role of Charge Transfer and Photostability in the Selection of Photosensitizers

Luis G. Arnaut; Mariette M. Pereira; Janusz M. Dąbrowski; Elsa F. F. Silva; Fábio A. Schaberle; Artur R. Abreu; Luis B. Rocha; Madalina M. Barsan; Krystyna Urbanska; Grażyna Stochel; Christopher M.A. Brett

Progress in the photodynamic therapy (PDT) of cancer should benefit from a rationale to predict the most efficient of a series of photosensitizers that strongly absorb light in the phototherapeutic window (650-800 nm) and efficiently generate reactive oxygen species (ROS = singlet oxygen and oxygen-centered radicals). We show that the ratios between the triplet photosensitizer-O2 interaction rate constant (kD) and the photosensitizer decomposition rate constant (kd), kD/kd, determine the relative photodynamic activities of photosensitizers against various cancer cells. The same efficacy trend is observed in vivo with DBA/2 mice bearing S91 melanoma tumors. The PDT efficacy intimately depends on the dynamics of photosensitizer-oxygen interactions: charge transfer to molecular oxygen with generation of both singlet oxygen and superoxide ion (high kD) must be tempered by photostability (low kd). These properties depend on the oxidation potential of the photosensitizer and are suitably combined in a new fluorinated sulfonamide bacteriochlorin, motivated by the rationale.


International Journal of Molecular Sciences | 2015

Intravenous Single-Dose Toxicity of Redaporfin-Based Photodynamic Therapy in Rodents

Luis B. Rocha; Fábio A. Schaberle; Janusz M. Dąbrowski; Sérgio Simões; Luis G. Arnaut

We assessed the tolerability and safety in rodents of a single intravenous (i.v.) dose of redaporfin, a novel photosensitizer for Photodynamic Therapy (PDT) of cancer. Two approaches were used to evaluate acute toxicity: (i) a dose escalation study in BALB/c mice to evaluate the maximum tolerated dose of redaporfin; and (ii) a safety toxicology study in Wistar rats, of a single dose of redaporfin, with or without illumination, to evaluate possible signs of systemic toxicity. Redaporfin formulation was well tolerated by mice, with no signs of adverse reactions up to 75 mg/kg. In rats, there were no relevant changes, except for a significant, but transient, increase in the blood serum markers for hepatic function and muscle integrity, and also on neutrophil counts, observed after the application of light. The overall results showed that redaporfin-PDT is very well tolerated. No abnormalities were observed, including reactions at the injection site or skin phototoxicity, although the animals were maintained in normal indoor lighting. Redaporfin also showed a high efficacy in the treatment of male BALB/c mice with subcutaneously implanted colon (CT26) tumours. Vascular-PDT with 1.5 mg/kg redaporfin and a light dose of 74 J/cm2 led to the complete tumour regression in 83% of the mice.


ChemBioChem | 2016

Pro-oxidant and Antioxidant Effects in Photodynamic Therapy: Cells Recognise that Not All Exogenous ROS Are Alike

Helder T. Soares; Joana R. S. Campos; Lígia C. Gomes-da-Silva; Fábio A. Schaberle; Janusz M. Dabrowski; Luis G. Arnaut

Photodynamic therapy (PDT) uses light, photosensitizer molecules and oxygen to generate reactive oxygen species (ROS) that kill cancer cells. Redaporfin, a new photosensitizer in clinical trials, generates both singlet oxygen and superoxide ions. We report the potentiation of redaporfin–PDT in combination with ascorbate and with the inhibition of antioxidant enzymes in A549 (human lung adenocarcinoma) and CT26 (mouse colon adenocarcinoma) cells. The addition of ascorbate and the inhibition of superoxide dismutase (SOD) strongly increased the phototoxicity of redaporfin towards A549 cells but not towards CT26 cells. The inhibition of catalase and the depletion of the glutathione pool also potentiate redaporfin–PDT towards A549 cells. The lower SOD activity of A549 cells might explain this difference. SOD activity levels may be explored to increase the selectivity and efficacy of PDT with photosensitizers that generate radical species.


European Conference on Biomedical Optics | 2011

Multi-spectral photoacoustic mapping of bacteriochlorins diffusing through the skin: exploring a new PAT contrast agent

Fábio A. Schaberle; Luís Reis; Gonçalo F. F. Sá; Carlos Serpa; Artur R. Abreu; Mariette M. Pereira; Luis G. Arnaut

A skin depth map was built reconstructing photoacoustic signals at several wavelengths of visible and infrared light. The mapping technique was used to follow the diffusion through the skin of near-infrared absorbing dyes. Such dyes can be useful for photodynamic therapy (PDT) of skin lesions and are investigated as contrast agents for photoacoustic tomography (PAT), because they strongly absorb light at wavelengths where the skin is more transparent.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2017

Ultrafast Dynamics of Manganese(III), Manganese(II), and Free-Base Bacteriochlorin: Is There Time for Photochemistry?

Fábio A. Schaberle; Artur R. Abreu; Nuno P. F. Gonçalves; Gonçalo F. F. Sá; Mariette M. Pereira; Luis G. Arnaut

Manganese(III) and manganese(II) complexes of halogenated sulfonamide tetraphenylbacteriochlorins were prepared for the first time via a transmetalation reaction and shown to be stable at room temperature. The behavior of the electronic states of the paramagnetic complexes is remarkably different from those of the metal-free bacteriochlorins or diamagnetic metallobacteriochlorins. The Mn3+ complex exhibits eight electronic transitions between different states from 300 to 1100 nm, with a very prominent band (molar absorption coefficient of ca. 50000 M-1 cm-1) at 829 nm. Ultrafast transient absorption showed the formation of an excited singquintet state that decays to a tripquintet state with a femtosecond lifetime. The tripquintet state decays in 5 ps, yielding a tripseptet state with a 570 ps lifetime. The electronic absorption of the Mn2+ complex more closely resembles those of diamagnetic metallobacteriochlorins, but the longest decay lifetime is only ca. 8 ps. The intense photoacoustic waves generated with near-infrared excitation suggest the use of these complexes in photoacoustic tomography.


Proceedings of SPIE, the International Society for Optical Engineering | 2010

Infrared absorbing dyes tailored for detection and therapy of solid tumors

Fábio A. Schaberle; Luis G. Arnaut; Carlos Serpa; Elsa F. F. Silva; Mariette M. Pereira; Artur R. Abreu; Sérgio Simões

We explore the use as contrast agents for photoacoustic tomography (PAT) of photosensitizers originally developed for the photodynamic therapy of cancer. We show that halogenated bacteriochlorins can enhance the sensitivity of PAT and increase the depth of the field probed by this technique.


Photodiagnosis and Photodynamic Therapy | 2018

Assessment of the actual light dose in photodynamic therapy

Fábio A. Schaberle

Photodynamic therapy (PDT) initiates with the absorption of light, which depend on the spectral overlap between the light source emission and the photosensitizer absorption, resulting in the number of photons absorbed, the key parameter starting PDT processes. Most papers report light doses regardless if the light is only partially absorbed or shifted relatively to the absorption peak, misleading the actual light dose value and not allowing quantitative comparisons between photosensitizers and light sources. In this manuscript a method is presented to calculate the actual light dose delivered by any light source for a given photosensitizer. This method allows comparing light doses delivered for any combination of light source (broad or narrow band or daylight) and photosensitizer.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2012

Photoacoustic spectroscopy of weakly absorbing media using nanosecond laser pulses

Luís Reis; Fábio A. Schaberle; Elsa F. F. Silva; Luis G. Arnaut

The anomalous behavior of the expansion coefficient of water near 4 °C was studied in a thin photoacoustic cell. We show that the thermal expansion of water vanishes at temperatures lower than 3 ºC when the optical path is shortened below 0.1 mm. We explain this behavior in terms of less favorable hydrogen bonding near the surface of water, which becomes relevant when the fraction of molecules near the surface contributes appreciable to the observed photoacoustic signal. The photoacoustic spectra of water and oleic acid in a thin photoacoustic cell matches the optical spectra from 720 nm to 2200 nm. The high sensitivity of the front-face photoacoustic cell allows for spectroscopy of weakly absorbing media but surface effects may have to be taken into account.


Photochemical and Photobiological Sciences | 2013

The challenging combination of intense fluorescence and high singlet oxygen quantum yield in photostable chlorins--a contribution to theranostics.

Elsa F. F. Silva; Fábio A. Schaberle; Carlos J. P. Monteiro; Janusz M. Dąbrowski; Luis G. Arnaut


Photochemical and Photobiological Sciences | 2010

Analytical solution for time-resolved photoacoustic calorimetry data and applications to two typical photoreactions

Fábio A. Schaberle; Rui M. D. Nunes; Monica Barroso; Carlos Serpa; Luis G. Arnaut

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