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Published January 19, 2022 | Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Multicolor Photoactivatable Raman Probes for Subcellular Imaging and Tracking by Cyclopropenone Caging

Abstract

Photoactivatable probes, with high-precision spatial and temporal control, have largely advanced bioimaging applications, particularly for fluorescence microscopy. While emerging Raman probes have recently pushed the frontiers of Raman microscopy for noninvasive small-molecule imaging and supermultiplex optical imaging with superb sensitivity and specificity, photoactivatable Raman probes remain less explored. Here, we report the first general design of multicolor photoactivatable alkyne Raman probes based on cyclopropenone caging for live-cell imaging and tracking. The fast photochemically generated alkynes from cyclopropenones enable background-free Raman imaging with desired photocontrollable features. We first synthesized and spectroscopically characterized a series of model cyclopropenones and identified the suitable light-activating scaffold. We further engineered the scaffold for enhanced chemical stability in a live-cell environment and improved Raman sensitivity. Organelle-targeting probes were then generated to achieve targeted imaging of mitochondria, lipid droplets, endoplasmic reticulum, and lysosomes. Multiplexed photoactivated imaging and tracking at both subcellular and single-cell levels was next demonstrated to monitor the dynamic migration and interactions of the cellular contents. We envision that this general design of multicolor photoactivatable Raman probes would open up new ways for spatial–temporal controlled profiling and interrogations in complex biological systems with high information throughput.

Additional Information

© 2021 American Chemical Society. Received: September 13, 2021; Published: December 16, 2021. The authors would like to thank Prof. Brian Stoltz for helpful discussions, the Center for Catalysis and Chemical Synthesis for access to LCMS and HPLC equipment and Dr. Mona Shahgholi of CCE Multiuser Mass Spectrometry Laboratory for assistance with high-resolution mass spectrometry, Xiaotian Bi for the assistance on preparing cell samples, and Amy-Doan Vo and Quan Gan for helpful discussion of the manuscript. L.W. acknowledges the startup funds from California Institute of Technology and the support from an Amgen early innovator award. The authors declare the following competing financial interest(s): L.W. and J.D are inventors of a patent application covering multicolor photoactivatable Raman probes.

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Created:
September 22, 2023
Modified:
October 23, 2023