Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.141, No.30, 12100-12108, 2019
Zinc Photocages with Improved Photophysical Properties and Cell Permeability Imparted by Ternary Complex Formation
Photocaged complexes can control the availability of metal ions to interrogate cellular signaling pathways. We describe a new photocage, {bis[(2-pyridyl)methyl]amino}(9-oxo-2-xanthenyl)acetic acid (XDPAdeCage, 1), which utilizes a 2-xanthone acetic acid group to mediate a photodecarboxylation reaction. XDPAdeCage photolyzes with a quantum yield of 27%, and binds Zn2+ with 4.6 pM affinity, which decreases by over 4 orders of magnitude after photolysis. For comparison to our previous approach to Zn2+ release via photodecarboxylation, the analogous photocage {bis[(2-pyridyl)methyl]amino}(m-nitrophenyl)acetic acid (DPAdeCage, 2), which uses a m-nitrobenzyl chromophore, was also prepared and characterized. The advantages of the 2-xanthone acetic acid chromophore include red-shifted excitation and a higher extinction coefficient at the preferred uncaging wavelength. The neutral ternary complex of [Zn(XDPAdeCage)](+) with the anionic ligand pyrithione is membrane permeable, which circumvents the need to utilize invasive techniques to introduce intracellular Zn2+ fluctuations. Using fluorescent imaging, we have confirmed transport of Zn2+ across membranes; in addition, RT-PCR experiments demonstrate changes in expression of Zn2+-responsive proteins after photolysis.