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Probing intracellular oxygen by quenched phosphorescence lifetimes of nanoparticles containing polyacrylamide-embedded [Ru(dpp(SO3Na)2)3]Cl2

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Probing intracellular oxygen by quenched phosphorescence lifetimes of nanoparticles containing polyacrylamide-embedded [Ru(dpp(SO3Na)2)3]Cl2. / Coogan, Michael; Court, Jonathan B. ; Gray, Victoria L. et al.
In: Photochemical and Photobiological Sciences, Vol. 9, No. 1, 2010, p. 103-109.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Coogan, M, Court, JB, Gray, VL, Hayes, AJ, Lloyd , SH, Millet, C, Pope, SJA & Lloyd, D 2010, 'Probing intracellular oxygen by quenched phosphorescence lifetimes of nanoparticles containing polyacrylamide-embedded [Ru(dpp(SO3Na)2)3]Cl2', Photochemical and Photobiological Sciences, vol. 9, no. 1, pp. 103-109. https://doi.org/10.1039/B9PP00071B

APA

Coogan, M., Court, J. B., Gray, V. L., Hayes, A. J., Lloyd , S. H., Millet, C., Pope, S. J. A., & Lloyd, D. (2010). Probing intracellular oxygen by quenched phosphorescence lifetimes of nanoparticles containing polyacrylamide-embedded [Ru(dpp(SO3Na)2)3]Cl2. Photochemical and Photobiological Sciences, 9(1), 103-109. https://doi.org/10.1039/B9PP00071B

Vancouver

Coogan M, Court JB, Gray VL, Hayes AJ, Lloyd SH, Millet C et al. Probing intracellular oxygen by quenched phosphorescence lifetimes of nanoparticles containing polyacrylamide-embedded [Ru(dpp(SO3Na)2)3]Cl2. Photochemical and Photobiological Sciences. 2010;9(1):103-109. doi: 10.1039/B9PP00071B

Author

Coogan, Michael ; Court, Jonathan B. ; Gray, Victoria L. et al. / Probing intracellular oxygen by quenched phosphorescence lifetimes of nanoparticles containing polyacrylamide-embedded [Ru(dpp(SO3Na)2)3]Cl2. In: Photochemical and Photobiological Sciences. 2010 ; Vol. 9, No. 1. pp. 103-109.

Bibtex

@article{021a14d9469b45478a509ef848ac2639,
title = "Probing intracellular oxygen by quenched phosphorescence lifetimes of nanoparticles containing polyacrylamide-embedded [Ru(dpp(SO3Na)2)3]Cl2",
abstract = "Methods for measuring O2 within living cells that rely on luminescent probes are hampered by several factors: local conditions of hydrophobicity, pH, ionic composition, dielectric constant, and photobleaching by free radical species. Use of a polymer-embedded luminophore should minimize these problems. Here we use a Ru(II) coordination complex embedded within 45 nm hydrodynamic diameter nanoparticles, and demonstrate that both phosphorescence intensity and lifetimes are O2-sensitive, both in aqueous suspensions and intracellularly (e.g. 4.06 versus 1.55 microseconds under anaerobic or aerobic conditions, respectively). Electroporation is necessary for incorporation of the nanoparticles into yeasts: it is more effective with the fission yeast, Schizosaccharomyces pombe, than for the budding yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae. However, electroporation was not required for particle uptake into a cultured human cell-line (mammary adenosarcoma MCF-7), although the intracellular distribution of the probe is more general to intracellular compartments when electroporation is employed. These procedures did not compromise vitality of cells over periods of 6 h, as judged by retention of structural characteristics evident in Nomarski interference or confocal microscopy images. Spatial resolution of intracellular structures defined by nanoparticle phosphorescence intensity imaging indicates potential usefulness of the application of lifetime imaging techniques for mapping of intracellular O2 distributions.",
author = "Michael Coogan and Court, {Jonathan B.} and Gray, {Victoria L.} and Hayes, {Anthony J.} and Lloyd, {Si{\^o}n H.} and Coralie Millet and Pope, {Simon J. A.} and David Lloyd",
year = "2010",
doi = "10.1039/B9PP00071B",
language = "English",
volume = "9",
pages = "103--109",
journal = "Photochemical and Photobiological Sciences",
issn = "1474-905X",
publisher = "Royal Society of Chemistry",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Probing intracellular oxygen by quenched phosphorescence lifetimes of nanoparticles containing polyacrylamide-embedded [Ru(dpp(SO3Na)2)3]Cl2

AU - Coogan, Michael

AU - Court, Jonathan B.

AU - Gray, Victoria L.

AU - Hayes, Anthony J.

AU - Lloyd , Siôn H.

AU - Millet, Coralie

AU - Pope, Simon J. A.

AU - Lloyd, David

PY - 2010

Y1 - 2010

N2 - Methods for measuring O2 within living cells that rely on luminescent probes are hampered by several factors: local conditions of hydrophobicity, pH, ionic composition, dielectric constant, and photobleaching by free radical species. Use of a polymer-embedded luminophore should minimize these problems. Here we use a Ru(II) coordination complex embedded within 45 nm hydrodynamic diameter nanoparticles, and demonstrate that both phosphorescence intensity and lifetimes are O2-sensitive, both in aqueous suspensions and intracellularly (e.g. 4.06 versus 1.55 microseconds under anaerobic or aerobic conditions, respectively). Electroporation is necessary for incorporation of the nanoparticles into yeasts: it is more effective with the fission yeast, Schizosaccharomyces pombe, than for the budding yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae. However, electroporation was not required for particle uptake into a cultured human cell-line (mammary adenosarcoma MCF-7), although the intracellular distribution of the probe is more general to intracellular compartments when electroporation is employed. These procedures did not compromise vitality of cells over periods of 6 h, as judged by retention of structural characteristics evident in Nomarski interference or confocal microscopy images. Spatial resolution of intracellular structures defined by nanoparticle phosphorescence intensity imaging indicates potential usefulness of the application of lifetime imaging techniques for mapping of intracellular O2 distributions.

AB - Methods for measuring O2 within living cells that rely on luminescent probes are hampered by several factors: local conditions of hydrophobicity, pH, ionic composition, dielectric constant, and photobleaching by free radical species. Use of a polymer-embedded luminophore should minimize these problems. Here we use a Ru(II) coordination complex embedded within 45 nm hydrodynamic diameter nanoparticles, and demonstrate that both phosphorescence intensity and lifetimes are O2-sensitive, both in aqueous suspensions and intracellularly (e.g. 4.06 versus 1.55 microseconds under anaerobic or aerobic conditions, respectively). Electroporation is necessary for incorporation of the nanoparticles into yeasts: it is more effective with the fission yeast, Schizosaccharomyces pombe, than for the budding yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae. However, electroporation was not required for particle uptake into a cultured human cell-line (mammary adenosarcoma MCF-7), although the intracellular distribution of the probe is more general to intracellular compartments when electroporation is employed. These procedures did not compromise vitality of cells over periods of 6 h, as judged by retention of structural characteristics evident in Nomarski interference or confocal microscopy images. Spatial resolution of intracellular structures defined by nanoparticle phosphorescence intensity imaging indicates potential usefulness of the application of lifetime imaging techniques for mapping of intracellular O2 distributions.

U2 - 10.1039/B9PP00071B

DO - 10.1039/B9PP00071B

M3 - Journal article

VL - 9

SP - 103

EP - 109

JO - Photochemical and Photobiological Sciences

JF - Photochemical and Photobiological Sciences

SN - 1474-905X

IS - 1

ER -