The homoditopic ligand has been designed to form neutral triple-stranded bimetallic helicates of overall composition []. The grafting of the polyoxyethylene fragments ensures water solubility and also favors cell penetration while being amenable to further derivatization. The ligand values have been determined by spectrophotometric titration and range from 3.5 (sum of the first two) to 10.3. The thermodynamic stability of the helicates is large at physiological pH ( in the range 22–23). The ligand triplet state has an adequate energy (0–phonon transition at ) for sensitizing the luminescence of (Q=11%). Analysis of the emission spectrum points to an overall pseudo symmetry for the metal environment. No significant effect of [] is observed on the viability of several cancerous cell lines (MCF-7, HeLa, Jurkat, and 5D10). The cell imaging properties of the helicate are demonstrated for the HeLa cell line by luminescence microscopy. Bright emission is seen for helicate concentration and after 20– 30 min loading time. The helicate stains the cytoplasm and the permeation mechanism is likely to be endocytosis.
Natalia Gasilova, Laure Menin, Maria Younes
Harm-Anton Klok, Olivier Burri, Arne Seitz, Romain Guiet, Maxime Ayer