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Dive into the research topics where Janet Cusido is active.

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Featured researches published by Janet Cusido.


Nature Communications | 2014

On-the-fly decoding luminescence lifetimes in the microsecond region for lanthanide-encoded suspension arrays

Yiqing Lu; Jie Lu; Jiangbo Zhao; Janet Cusido; Françisco M. Raymo; Jingli Yuan; Sean Yang; Robert C. Leif; Yujing Huo; James A. Piper; J. Paul Robinson; Ewa M. Goldys; Dayong Jin

Significant multiplexing capacity of optical time-domain coding has been recently demonstrated by tuning luminescence lifetimes of the upconversion nanoparticles called ‘τ-Dots’. It provides a large dynamic range of lifetimes from microseconds to milliseconds, which allows creating large libraries of nanotags/microcarriers. However, a robust approach is required to rapidly and accurately measure the luminescence lifetimes from the relatively slow-decaying signals. Here we show a fast algorithm suitable for the microsecond region with precision closely approaching the theoretical limit and compatible with the rapid scanning cytometry technique. We exploit this approach to further extend optical time-domain multiplexing to the downconversion luminescence, using luminescence microspheres wherein lifetimes are tuned through luminescence resonance energy transfer. We demonstrate real-time discrimination of these microspheres in the rapid scanning cytometry, and apply them to the multiplexed probing of pathogen DNA strands. Our results indicate that tunable luminescence lifetimes have considerable potential in high-throughput analytical sciences.


Langmuir | 2011

Fast and Stable Photochromic Oxazines for Fluorescence Switching

Erhan Deniz; Massimiliano Tomasulo; Janet Cusido; Salvatore Sortino; Françisco M. Raymo

The stringent limitations imposed by diffraction on the spatial resolution of fluorescence microscopes demand the identification of viable strategies to switch fluorescence under optical control. In this context, the photoinduced and reversible transformations of photochromic compounds are particularly valuable. In fact, these molecules can be engineered to regulate the emission intensities of complementary fluorophores in response to optical stimulations. On the basis of this general design logic, we assembled a functional molecular construct consisting of a borondipyrromethene fluorophore and a nitrospiropyran photochrome and demonstrated that the emission of the former can be modulated with the interconversion of the latter. This fluorophore-photochrome dyad, however, has a slow switching speed and poor fatigue resistance. To improve both parameters, we developed a new family of photochromic switches based on the photoinduced opening and thermal closing of an oxazine ring. These compounds switch back and forth between ring-closed and -open isomers on nanosecond-microsecond timescales and tolerate thousands of switching cycles with no sign of degradation. In addition, the attachment of appropriate chromophoric fragments to their switchable oxazine ring can be exploited to either deactivate or activate fluorescence reversibly in response to illumination with a pair of exciting beams. Specifically, we assembled three dyads, each based on either a borondipyrromethene or a coumarin fluorophore and an oxazine photochrome, and modulated their fluorescence in a few microseconds with outstanding fatigue resistance. The unique photochemical and photophysical properties of our fluorophore-photochrome dyads can facilitate the development of switchable fluorophores for superresolution imaging and, ultimately, provide valuable molecular probes for the visualization of biological samples on the nanometer level.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2012

Fast Fluorescence Switching within Hydrophilic Supramolecular Assemblies

Janet Cusido; Mutlu Battal; Erhan Deniz; Ibrahim Yildiz; Salvatore Sortino; Françisco M. Raymo

We designed a supramolecular strategy to modulate fluorescence in water under optical control. It is based on the entrapment of fluorophore-photochrome dyads within the hydrophobic interior of an amphiphilic polymer. The polymeric envelope around the dyads protects them from the aqueous environment, while imposing hydrophilic character on the overall supramolecular construct. In the resulting assemblies, the photochromic component can be operated reversibly on a microsecond timescale under the influence of ultraviolet stimulations. In turn, the reversible transformations control the emission intensity of the adjacent fluorophore. As a result, the fluorescence of such nanostructured constructs can be photomodulated for hundreds of cycles in water with microsecond switching speeds. Thus, our protocol for fast fluorescence switching in aqueous solutions can eventually lead to the realization of functional probes for the investigation of biological samples.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Intracellular Guest Exchange between Dynamic Supramolecular Hosts

Subramani Swaminathan; Colin Fowley; Bridgeen McCaughan; Janet Cusido; John F. Callan; Françisco M. Raymo

Decyl and oligo(ethylene glycol) chains were appended to the same poly(methacrylate) backbone to generate an amphiphilic polymer with a ratio between hydrophobic and hydrophilic segments of 2.5. At concentrations greater than 10 μg mL(-1) in neutral buffer, multiple copies of this particular macromolecule assemble into nanoparticles with a hydrodynamic diameter of 15 nm. In the process of assembling, these nanoparticles can capture anthracene donors and borondipyrromethene acceptors within their hydrophobic interior and permit the transfer of excitation energy with an efficiency of 95%. Energy transfer is observed also if nanocarriers containing exclusively the donors are mixed with nanoparticles preloaded separately with the acceptors in aqueous media. The two sets of supramolecular assemblies exchange their guests with fast kinetics upon mixing to co-localize complementary chromophores within the same nanostructured container and enable energy transfer. After guest exchange, the nanoparticles can cross the membrane of cervical cancer cells and bring the co-entrapped donors and acceptors within the intracellular environment. Alternatively, intracellular energy transfer is also established after sequential cell incubation with nanoparticles containing the donors first and then with nanocarriers preloaded with the acceptors or vice versa. Under these conditions, the nanoparticles exchange their cargo only after internalization and allow energy transfer exclusively within the cell interior. Thus, the dynamic character of such supramolecular containers offers the opportunity to transport independently complementary species inside cells and permit their interaction only within the intracellular space.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2012

Fluorescence photoactivation by intermolecular proton transfer.

Subramani Swaminathan; Marco Petriella; Erhan Deniz; Janet Cusido; James D. Baker; Mariano L. Bossi; Françisco M. Raymo

We designed a strategy to activate fluorescence under the influence of optical stimulations based on the intermolecular transfer of protons. Specifically, the illumination of a 2-nitrobenzyl derivative at an activating wavelength is accompanied by the release of hydrogen bromide. In turn, the photogenerated acid encourages the opening of an oxazine ring embedded within a halochromic compound. This structural transformation extends the conjugation of an adjacent coumarin fluorophore and enables its absorption at an appropriate excitation wavelength. Indeed, this bimolecular system offers the opportunity to activate fluorescence in liquid solutions, within rigid matrixes and inside micellar assemblies, relying on the interplay of activating and exciting beams. Furthermore, this strategy permits the permanent imprinting of fluorescent patterns on polymer films, the monitoring of proton diffusion within such materials in real time on a millisecond time scale, and the acquisition of images with spatial resolution at the nanometer level. Thus, our operating principles for fluorescence activation can eventually lead to the development of valuable photoswitchable probes for imaging applications and versatile mechanisms for the investigation of proton transport.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

Oxazines: A New Class of Second-Order Nonlinear Optical Switches

Pierre Beaujean; Flavie Bondu; Aurélie Plaquet; Jaume Garcia-Amorós; Janet Cusido; Françisco M. Raymo; Frédéric Castet; Vincent Rodriguez; Benoît Champagne

A combined experimental-theoretical investigation has revealed that oxazine-based compounds are multiaddressable, multistate, and multifunctional molecular switches exhibiting contrasts of both linear and second-order nonlinear optical properties. The switching properties are particularly large when the substituent is a donor group. In this study, the cleavage of the C-O bond at the junction of the indole and oxazine cycles (of the closed a forms) is acido-triggered, leading to an open form (b(+)) characterized by larger first hyperpolarizabilities (βHRS) and smaller excitation energies than in the closed form. These results are confirmed and interpreted utilizing ab initio calculations that have been carried out on a broad set of compounds to unravel the role of the substituent. With respect to acceptor groups, oxazines bearing donor groups are characterized not only by larger βHRS and βHRS contrast ratios but also by smaller excitation energies, larger opening-induced charge transfer, and reduction of the bond length alternation, as well as smaller Gibbs energies of the opening reaction. Compared to protonated open forms (b(+)), calculations on the zwitterionic open forms (b) have pointed out similarities in the long-wavelength UV/vis absorption spectra, whereas their βHRS values might differ strongly as a function of the substituent. Indeed, the open forms present two NLOphores, the indoleninium-substituent entity and the nitrophenol (present in the protonated open form, b(+)) or nitrophenolate (present in the zwitterionic open form, b) moiety. Then, nitrophenolate displays a larger first hyperpolarizability than nitrophenol and the β tensor of the two entities might reinforce or cancel each other.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2012

Insights into the isomerization of photochromic oxazines from the excitation dynamics of BODIPY-oxazine dyads

Erhan Deniz; Mutlu Battal; Janet Cusido; Salvatore Sortino; Françisco M. Raymo

We synthesized five BODIPY-oxazine dyads in one to four synthetic steps from known precursors. They differ in the nature of the unsaturated spacer linking the oxazine photochrome to either the conjugated framework or the boron center of the BODIPY fluorophore. Despite the π-character of the linkers, the two functional components are electronically isolated in the ground state and the BODIPY fluorophore maintains its absorption and, with one exception, emission properties unaltered. Instead, the photochemical response of the photochromic component is completely suppressed within all dyads. Rather than the expected opening of the oxazine ring, the laser excitation of these molecular assemblies results in the effective population of the BODIPY triplet in four of the five dyads. Control experiments with appropriate model compounds indicate that the local excitation of the oxazine component results first in intersystem crossing and then energy transfer to the BODIPY component. In fact, the transfer of energy from the triplet state of the former to the triplet state of the latter competes successfully with the opening of the oxazine ring and prevents the isomerization of the photochromic component. These observations demonstrate, for the very first time, that the photoinduced opening of these photochromic oxazines occurs along the potential energy surface of their triplet state. Such valuable mechanistic insights into their excitation dynamics can guide the design of novel members of this family of photochromic compounds with improved photochemical properties.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2018

Far-Red Photoactivatable BODIPYs for the Super-Resolution Imaging of Live Cells

Yang Zhang; Ki-Hee Song; Sicheng Tang; Laura Ravelo; Janet Cusido; Cheng Sun; Hao F. Zhang; Françisco M. Raymo

The photoinduced disconnection of an oxazine heterocycle from a borondipyrromethene (BODIPY) chromophore activates bright far-red fluorescence. The high brightness of the product and the lack of autofluorescence in this spectral region allow its detection at the single-molecule level within the organelles of live cells. Indeed, these photoactivatable fluorophores localize in lysosomal compartments and remain covalently immobilized within these organelles. The suppression of diffusion allows the reiterative reconstruction of subdiffraction images and the visualization of the labeled organelles with excellent localization precision. Thus, the combination of photochemical, photophysical and structural properties designed into our fluorophores enable the visualization of live cells with a spatial resolution that is inaccessible to conventional fluorescence imaging.


European Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2009

Fluorescent Switches Based on Photochromic Compounds

Janet Cusido; Erhan Deniz; Françisco M. Raymo


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2012

Photoactivatable Fluorophores for Super-Resolution Imaging Based on Oxazine Auxochromes

Erhan Deniz; Massimiliano Tomasulo; Janet Cusido; Ibrahim Yildiz; Marco Petriella; Mariano L. Bossi; Salvatore Sortino; Françisco M. Raymo

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Mariano L. Bossi

University of Buenos Aires

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Marco Petriella

University of Buenos Aires

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