TY - JOUR
T1 - Persistent Chemiluminescent Glow of Phenoxy-dioxetane Luminophore Enables Unique CRET-Based Detection of Proteases
AU - Hananya, Nir
AU - Press, Ofir
AU - Das, Alakesh
AU - Scomparin, Anna
AU - Satchi-Fainaro, Ronit
AU - Sagi, Irit
AU - Shabat, Doron
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim
PY - 2019/11/18
Y1 - 2019/11/18
N2 - Chemiluminescence is being considered an effective imaging modality as it offers low background and high sensitivity. Recent discovery by our group has led to development of new phenoxy-dioxetane chemiluminescence luminophores, which are highly bright under physiological conditions. However, the current scope of probes based on these luminophores is limited, as they can only be turned on by phenol protecting group removal. Here we present a new chemiluminescence resonance energy transfer (CRET) system, Glow-CRET, in which light emission is triggered by proteolytic cleavage of a peptide substrate that links a dioxetane luminophore and a quencher. In order to compose such system, a new phenoxy-dioxetane luminophore, 7-HC-CL, was developed. This luminophore exhibits intense and persistent glow chemiluminescence; it undergoes very slow chemiexcitation, and it has the highest chemiluminescence quantum yield ever reported under physiological conditions. Based on 7-HC-CL, a Glow-CRET probe for matrix metalloproteinases, MMP-CL, was synthesized. Incubation of MMP-CL with its cognate protease resulted in 160-fold increase in chemiluminescence signal. MMP-CL was also able to detect matrix metalloproteinase activity in cancer cells with significantly higher signal-to-background ratio than an analogous fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET)-based probe. This work is expected to open new horizons in chemiluminescence imaging, as it enables to use the dioxetanes in ways that had not been possible. We anticipate that 7-HC-CL and future derivatives will be utilized not only for the construction of further Glow-CRET probes, but also for other applications, such as chemiluminescence tagging of proteins.
AB - Chemiluminescence is being considered an effective imaging modality as it offers low background and high sensitivity. Recent discovery by our group has led to development of new phenoxy-dioxetane chemiluminescence luminophores, which are highly bright under physiological conditions. However, the current scope of probes based on these luminophores is limited, as they can only be turned on by phenol protecting group removal. Here we present a new chemiluminescence resonance energy transfer (CRET) system, Glow-CRET, in which light emission is triggered by proteolytic cleavage of a peptide substrate that links a dioxetane luminophore and a quencher. In order to compose such system, a new phenoxy-dioxetane luminophore, 7-HC-CL, was developed. This luminophore exhibits intense and persistent glow chemiluminescence; it undergoes very slow chemiexcitation, and it has the highest chemiluminescence quantum yield ever reported under physiological conditions. Based on 7-HC-CL, a Glow-CRET probe for matrix metalloproteinases, MMP-CL, was synthesized. Incubation of MMP-CL with its cognate protease resulted in 160-fold increase in chemiluminescence signal. MMP-CL was also able to detect matrix metalloproteinase activity in cancer cells with significantly higher signal-to-background ratio than an analogous fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET)-based probe. This work is expected to open new horizons in chemiluminescence imaging, as it enables to use the dioxetanes in ways that had not been possible. We anticipate that 7-HC-CL and future derivatives will be utilized not only for the construction of further Glow-CRET probes, but also for other applications, such as chemiluminescence tagging of proteins.
KW - FRET
KW - chemiluminescence
KW - dioxetanes
KW - imaging agents
KW - metalloproteinases
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85074109362&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/chem.201903489
DO - 10.1002/chem.201903489
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AN - SCOPUS:85074109362
SN - 0947-6539
VL - 25
SP - 14679
EP - 14687
JO - Chemistry - A European Journal
JF - Chemistry - A European Journal
IS - 64
ER -