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Self-reporting styrylthiazolium photopharmaceuticals: mitochondrial localisation as well as SAR drive biological activity.

Authors :
Gao L
Kraus Y
Stegner A
Wein T
Heise C
von Brunn L
Fajardo-Ruiz E
Thorn-Seshold J
Thorn-Seshold O
Source :
Organic & biomolecular chemistry [Org Biomol Chem] 2022 Oct 12; Vol. 20 (39), pp. 7787-7794. Date of Electronic Publication: 2022 Oct 12.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Novel photoswitches offering features complementary to the well-established azobenzenes are increasingly driving high-precision research in cellular photopharmacology. Styrylthiazolium (StyTz) and styrylbenzothiazolium (StyBtz) are cellularly untested E / Z -isomerisation photoswitches which are nearly isosteric to azobenzenes, but have distinct properties: including ca. 60 nm red-shifted π → π* absorption, self-reporting fluorescence, Z → E relaxation on typical biological timescales, and decent solubility (positive charge). We tested StyTz and StyBtz for their potential as photopharmaceutical scaffolds, by applying them to photocontrol microtubule dynamics. They light-specifically disrupt microtubule network architecture and block cell proliferation: yet, testing lead compound StyBtz2 for its molecular mechanism of action showed that it did not inhibit microtubule dynamics. Using its self-reporting fluorescence, we tracked its localisation in live cells and observed accumulation of E -StyBtz2 into mitochondria; during prolonged illumination, it was released into the cytosol, and blebbing and cell death were observed. We interpret this as light-dependent rupturing of mitochondria on acute timescales. We conclude that StyTz/StyBtz can be interesting photopharmaceutical scaffolds for addressing mitochondrial, rather than cytosolic, targets.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1477-0539
Volume :
20
Issue :
39
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Organic & biomolecular chemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
36172848
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1039/d2ob00347c