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Dive into the research topics where Ilke Simsek Turan is active.

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Featured researches published by Ilke Simsek Turan.


Organic Letters | 2013

Chromogenic and Fluorogenic Sensing of Biological Thiols in Aqueous Solutions Using BODIPY-Based Reagents

Murat Işık; Tugba Ozdemir; Ilke Simsek Turan; Safacan Kolemen; Engin U. Akkaya

Judicious design of BODIPY dyes carrying nitroethenyl substituents in conjugation with the BODIPY core yields dyes that respond to biological thiols by both absorbance and emission changes. Incorporation of solubilizing ethyleneglycol units ensures water solubility. The result is bright signaling of biologically relevant thiols in the longer wavelength region of the visible spectrum and in aqueous solutions.


Angewandte Chemie | 2016

A Bifunctional Photosensitizer for Enhanced Fractional Photodynamic Therapy: Singlet Oxygen Generation in the Presence and Absence of Light.

Ilke Simsek Turan; Deniz Yildiz; Abdurrahman Turksoy; Gurcan Gunaydin; Engin U. Akkaya

The photosensitized generation of singlet oxygen within tumor tissues during photodynamic therapy (PDT) is self-limiting, as the already low oxygen concentrations within tumors is further diminished during the process. In certain applications, to minimize photoinduced hypoxia the light is introduced intermittently (fractional PDT) to allow time for the replenishment of cellular oxygen. This condition extends the time required for effective therapy. Herein, we demonstrated that a photosensitizer with an additional 2-pyridone module for trapping singlet oxygen would be useful in fractional PDT. Thus, in the light cycle, the endoperoxide of 2-pyridone is generated along with singlet oxygen. In the dark cycle, the endoperoxide undergoes thermal cycloreversion to produce singlet oxygen, regenerating the 2-pyridone module. As a result, the photodynamic process can continue in the dark as well as in the light cycles. Cell-culture studies validated this working principle in vitro.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2014

Near‐IR Absorbing BODIPY Derivatives as Glutathione‐Activated Photosensitizers for Selective Photodynamic Action

Ilke Simsek Turan; Fatma Pir Cakmak; Deniz Cansen Yildirim; Rengul Cetin-Atalay; Engin U. Akkaya

Enhanced spatiotemporal selectivity in photonic sensitization of dissolved molecular oxygen is an important target for improving the potential and the practical applications of photodynamic therapy. Considering the high intracellular glutathione concentrations within cancer cells, a series of BODIPY-based sensitizers that can generate cytotoxic singlet oxygen only after glutathione-mediated cleavage of the electron-sink module were designed and synthesized. Cell culture studies not only validate our design, but also suggest an additional role for the relatively hydrophobic quencher module in the internalization of the photosensitizer.


Organic Letters | 2014

Chemiluminescence Sensing of Fluoride Ions Using a Self-Immolative Amplifier

Ilke Simsek Turan; Engin U. Akkaya

An enhanced chemiluminescence signal is obtained when electronically triggered dioxetane cleavage is initiated by fluoride-mediated deprotection of the silyl-protecting group, followed by self-immolation via 1,4-quinone-methide rearrangement. The reaction takes place even when the probe is trapped within a PMMA layer on top of a glass plate. In that arrangement, fluoride in aqueous solutions can be detected selectively at low micromolar concentrations.


RSC Advances | 2015

A sensitive and selective chemiluminogenic probe for palladium

Ilke Simsek Turan; Ozge Yilmaz; Betul Karatas; Engin U. Akkaya

Palladium triggered removal of a propargyl group leads to the cleavage of the 1,2-dioxetane ring, leading to bright chemiluminescence. The reaction of the probe is highly specific for the Pd species, thus the probe described here has considerable potential for practical utility.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Catalytic Conversion of Lipophilic Substrates by Phase constrained Enzymes in the Aqueous or in the Membrane Phase

Marcus Cebula; Ilke Simsek Turan; Birgitta Sjödin; Madhuranayaki Thulasingam; Joseph S. Brock; Volodymyr Chmyrov; Jerker Widengren; Hiroshi Abe; Bengt Mannervik; Jesper Z. Haeggström; Agnes Rinaldo-Matthis; Engin U. Akkaya; Ralf Morgenstern

Both soluble and membrane-bound enzymes can catalyze the conversion of lipophilic substrates. The precise substrate access path, with regard to phase, has however, until now relied on conjecture from enzyme structural data only (certainly giving credible and valuable hypotheses). Alternative methods have been missing. To obtain the first experimental evidence directly determining the access paths (of lipophilic substrates) to phase constrained enzymes we here describe the application of a BODIPY-derived substrate (PS1). Using this tool, which is not accessible to cytosolic enzymes in the presence of detergent and, by contrast, not accessible to membrane embedded enzymes in the absence of detergent, we demonstrate that cytosolic and microsomal glutathione transferases (GSTs), both catalyzing the activation of PS1, do so only within their respective phases. This approach can serve as a guideline to experimentally validate substrate access paths, a fundamental property of phase restricted enzymes. Examples of other enzyme classes with members in both phases are xenobiotic-metabolizing sulphotransferases/UDP-glucuronosyl transferases or epoxide hydrolases. Since specific GSTs have been suggested to contribute to tumor drug resistance, PS1 can also be utilized as a tool to discriminate between phase constrained members of these enzymes by analyzing samples in the absence and presence of Triton X-100.


Nature Communications | 2018

Molecular demultiplexer as a terminator automaton

Ilke Simsek Turan; Gurcan Gunaydin; Seylan Ayan; Engin U. Akkaya

Molecular logic gates are expected to play an important role on the way to information processing therapeutic agents, especially considering the wide variety of physical and chemical responses that they can elicit in response to the inputs applied. Here, we show that a 1:2 demultiplexer based on a Zn2+-terpyridine-Bodipy conjugate with a quenched fluorescent emission, is efficient in photosensitized singlet oxygen generation as inferred from trap compound experiments and cell culture data. However, once the singlet oxygen generated by photosensitization triggers apoptotic response, the Zn2+ complex then interacts with the exposed phosphatidylserine lipids in the external leaflet of the membrane bilayer, autonomously switching off singlet oxygen generation, and simultaneously switching on a bright emission response. This is the confirmatory signal of the cancer cell death by the action of molecular automaton and the confinement of unintended damage by excessive singlet oxygen production.Nanorobots will likely play a major role in future therapeutic approaches. Here, the authors develop a molecular automaton based on Zinc-BODIPY complexes that can autonomously switch between singlet oxygen generation and fluorescence emission, i.e., therapeutic and diagnostic modes.


ACS Omega | 2017

Amplified Chemiluminescence Signal for Sensing Fluoride Ions

Ilke Simsek Turan; Ozlem Seven; Seylan Ayan; Engin U. Akkaya

Bringing together the concepts of self-immolative linkers and chemiluminogen dioxetane modules, a chemiluminescence-based sensor for fluoride with signal amplification is presented. Signal amplification is obtained by triggering two chemiluminescence events for each reacting fluoride ion that in turn releases two fluoride ions for each ion. As expected, the chemiluminescence signal starts to rise following an induction period. In addition to the analytical potential, this chemical system is also of interest as a demonstration of positive feedback loop character.


Sensors and Actuators B-chemical | 2014

A chromogenic dioxetane chemosensor for hydrogen sulfide and pH dependent off–on chemiluminescence property

Ilke Simsek Turan; Fazli Sozmen


Tetrahedron Letters | 2014

Highly selective fluoride sensing via chromogenic aggregation of a silyloxy-functionalized tetraphenylethylene (TPE) derivative

Ilke Simsek Turan; Fatma Pir Cakmak; Fazli Sozmen

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