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Photochemical behavior of biosupramolecular assemblies of photosensitizers, cucurbit[n]urils and albumins
Author(s) -
Javiera Cáceres,
José RobinsonDuggon,
Anita Tapia,
Constanza Paiva,
M. Gómez,
Cornelia Bohne,
Denis Fuentealba
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
physical chemistry chemical physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.053
H-Index - 239
eISSN - 1463-9084
pISSN - 1463-9076
DOI - 10.1039/c6cp07749h
Subject(s) - photodynamic therapy , chemistry , photochemistry , organic chemistry
Biosupramolecular assemblies combining cucurbit[n]urils (CB[n]s) and proteins for the targeted delivery of drugs have the potential to improve the photoactivity of photosensitizers used in the photodynamic therapy of cancer. Understanding the complexity of these systems and how it affects the properties of photosensitizers is the focus of this work. We used acridine orange (AO + ) as a model photosensitizer and compared it with methylene blue (MB + ) and a cationic porphyrin (TMPyP 4+ ). Encapsulation of the photosensitizers into CB[n]s (n = 7, 8) modified their photoactivity. In particular, for AO + , the photo-oxidation of HSA was enhanced in the presence of CB[7]; meanwhile it was decreased when included into CB[8]. Accordingly, peroxide generation and protein fragmentation were also increased when AO + was encapsulated into CB[7]. The triplet excited state lifetimes of all the photosensitizers were lengthened by their encapsulation into CB[n]s, while the singlet oxygen quantum yield was enhanced only for AO + and TMPyP 4+ , but it decreased for MB + . The results obtained in this work prompt the necessity of further investigating these kinds of hybrid assemblies as drug delivery systems because of their possible applications in biomedicine.

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