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Article
Photoswitching Azo Compounds in Vivo with Red Light
Journal of the American Chemical Society (2013)
  • Subhas Samanta, University of Toronto
  • Amirhossein Babalhavaeji, University of Toronto
  • Andrew A. Beharry, University of Toronto
  • Oleg Sadovski, University of Toronto
  • Theresa M. McCormick, University of Toronto
  • Vince Tropepe, University of Toronto
  • G. Andrew Woolley, University of Toronto
Abstract
The photoisomerization of azobenzenes provides a general means for the photocontrol of molecular structure and function. For applications in vivo, however, the wavelength of irradiation required for trans-to-cis isomerization of azobenzenes is critical since UV and most visible wavelengths are strongly scattered by cells and tissues. We report here that azobenzene compounds in which all four positions ortho to the azo group are substituted with bulky electron-rich substituents can be effectively isomerized with red light (630–660 nm), a wavelength range that is orders of magnitude more penetrating through tissue than other parts of the visible spectrum. When the ortho substituent is chloro, the compounds also exhibit stability to reduction by glutathione, enabling their use in intracellular environments in vivo.
Disciplines
Publication Date
June, 2013
Citation Information
Subhas Samanta, Amirhossein Babalhavaeji, Andrew A. Beharry, Oleg Sadovski, et al.. "Photoswitching Azo Compounds in Vivo with Red Light" Journal of the American Chemical Society Vol. 135 Iss. 26 (2013)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/theresa_mccormick/12/