S I Pascu

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Organization: University of Bath , England
Department: 1 Department of Chemistry
Title: (PhD)

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Co-reporter:Katherine Lawrence, Fengjie Xia, Rory L. Arrowsmith, Haobo Ge, Geoffrey W. Nelson, John S. Foord, Mónica Felipe-Sotelo, Nick D. M. Evans, John M. Mitchels, Stephen E. Flower, Stanley W. Botchway, Daniel Wolverson, Gazi N. Aliev, Tony D. James, Sofia I. Pascu, and Frank Marken
Langmuir October 7, 2014 Volume 30(Issue 39) pp:11746-11752
Publication Date(Web):October 7, 2014
DOI:10.1021/la404866s
A novel two-photon-fluorescent N,O-heteroatom-rich carbon nanomaterial has been synthesized and characterized. The new carbon nanoparticles were produced by hydrothermal conversion from a one-photon-fluorescent poly(4-vinylpyridine) precursor (P4VP). The carbonized particles (cP4VP dots) with nonuniform particle diameter (ranging from sub-6 to 20 nm with some aggregates up to 200 nm) exhibit strong fluorescence properties in different solvents and have also been investigated for applications in cell culture media. The cP4VP dots retain their intrinsic fluorescence in a cellular environment and exhibit an average excited-state lifetime of 2.0 ± 0.9 ns in the cell. The cP4VP dots enter HeLa cells and do not cause significant damage to outer cell membranes. They provide one-photon or two-photon fluorescent synthetic scaffolds for imaging applications and/or drug delivery.
Co-reporter:Haobo Ge, Patrick J. Riss, Vincenzo Mirabello, David G. Calatayud, ... Sofia I. Pascu
Chem 2017 Volume 3, Issue 3(Volume 3, Issue 3) pp:
Publication Date(Web):14 September 2017
DOI:10.1016/j.chempr.2017.06.013
•Hierarchical functionalization of SWNTs by self-assembled processes in water•Rapid and high kinetic stability encapsulation of 64Cu ions from water•Dynamic microPET imaging in Wistar rats shows almost exclusive lung biolocalization•Imaging and cell-viability tests confirm kinetic stability and biocompatibilityThis work is an important step toward the biomedical implementation of functional materials of relevance to the radiopharmaceutical industry, nanomedicine, and early detection of cancers. We found that carbon nanotubes have the ability to redirect the trajectory of radiochemicals, which can lead to the in vivo imaging of the lung. This research supports the hypothesis that it is possible to use cutting-edge imaging techniques to develop biocompatible materials for sensing and imaging within the field of radiodiagnostics. Previous studies have shown that carbon nanotubes have high in vivo toxicity. The conceptual advance of our findings is that they can also act as scaffolds for the encapsulation of positron emitting radioisotopes in water, and their subsequent supramolecular wrapping leads to a diminished toxicity. The broader significance is that this work provides a simple and rapid approach to nanomedicine in water and addresses significant radiosynthetic and imaging challenges.Hybrid materials based on supramolecularly assembled single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) are generated for positron emission tomography (PET), magnetic resonance imaging, and fluorescence imaging. The all-in-one imaging probe allows quantitative imaging from subcellular resolution to whole tissue regions. The SWNTs can be exposed to aqueous solutions of non-radioactive and radioactive metal salts in the presence of fullerenes and β-d-glucan. Encapsulating 64Cu ions achieves a minimum of 69% incorporation of radiochemical. The results suggest that this method can be extended to other metal ions of medical relevance, such as zirconium(IV)-89 or rhenium(VII)-188, which are used for medical imaging or radiotherapy, respectively. The in vivo uptake of 64Cu(II)@SWNT@β-d-glucan in Wistar rats allows the investigation of organ biodistribution by microPET. Radioactivity rapidly accumulates predominantly in the lungs and myocardium with peak uptakes of 4.8 ± 0.9 standardized uptake value. Furthermore, such materials are fully traceable in cells by multiphoton fluorescence lifetime imaging with near-infrared excitation (910 nm).Download high-res image (230KB)Download full-size image
Co-reporter:Meng Li;Haobo Ge;Vincenzo Mirabello;Rory L. Arrowsmith;Gabriele Kociok-Köhn;Stanley W. Botchway;Weihong Zhu;Sofia I. Pascu;Tony D. James
Chemical Communications 2017 vol. 53(Issue 81) pp:11161-11164
Publication Date(Web):2017/10/10
DOI:10.1039/C7CC05166B
A naphthalimide-based chemosensing motif turns ON the fluorescence emission in solution in the presence of aqueous iron(III) chloride, and maintains this property in living cancer cells. The emission response to Fe(III) ions occurs simultaneously with a change in pH. The protonation of methyl piperazine-conjugated naphthalimide promotes its lysosomal localisation as assessed by co-localisation tests and fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM) in vitro.
Co-reporter:James A. Tyson;Vincenzo Mirabello;David G. Calatayud;Haobo Ge;Gabriele Kociok-Köhn;Stanley W. Botchway;G. Dan Panto&x15f;;Sofia I. Pascu
Advanced Functional Materials 2016 Volume 26( Issue 31) pp:5641-5657
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/adfm.201601123

This study reports on the supramolecular assemblies formed between planar carbon systems (PCSs) such as thermally reduced graphene oxide (TRGO) and its small-molecule model system coronene and a series of d- and l-α amino acid derivatized naphthalenediimides (NDIs) where the halogen substituents (X = F, Cl, Br, I) are varied systematically. Confocal fluorescence microscopy of NDIs, NDI•coronene, and NDI•TRGO complexes is performed proving the uptake and stability of such complexes in the cellular environment and suggesting their potential as prostate cancer imaging agents. 1H NMR and UV–vis spectroscopy studies support the formation of charge transfer complexes whereby the increasing polarizability and general electronegativity of the aryl halide substituted at the NDI periphery influence the magnitude of the association constants in the ground state between NDI and coronene. Complexation between NDIs and PCSs also results in stable photoexcited assemblies within the solution (coronene) as well as the dispersed phased (TRGO). Fluorescence emission titrations and 2-photon time correlated single photon counting measurements suggest the existence of dynamic quenching mechanisms upon the excitation of the fluorophore in the presence of the carbon substrates, as these methods are sensitive proves for the subtle changes in the NDI environment. The series of halogenated species used exerts supramolecular control over the degree of surface assembly on the TRGO and over the interactions with the coronene molecule, and this is of relevance to the assembly of future biosensing platforms as these materials can both be viewed as congeners of graphene. Finally, MTT assays carried out in PC-3 cells demonstrate that the stable noncovalent functionalization of TRGO and coronene with either l or d NDIs remarkably improves the cellular viability in the presence of such graphene-like materials. These phenomena are of particular relevance for the understanding of the direct donor–acceptor interactions in solutions which govern the design of nanomaterials with future biosensing and bioimaging applications.

Co-reporter:Boyang Mao;David G. Calatayud;Vincenzo Mirabello;Benjamin J. Hodges;José Alberto Ribeiro Martins;Stanley W. Botchway;John M. Mitchels;Sofia I. Pascu
Advanced Functional Materials 2016 Volume 26( Issue 5) pp:687-697
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/adfm.201504147

The surface modification of graphene oxide (GO) is carried out via the supramolecular functionalization route using a Zn(II)-porphyrin which is soluble in common organic solvents on basis of long alkyl chains present at the exocyclic positions. This acts as a dispersing agent and decorates the surface of the graphene oxide uniformly, giving rise to a new nanohybrid denoted Zn(II)-porphyrin@GO. The resulting Zn(II)-porphyrin@GO nanohybrid forms a stable dispersion in ethanol (as characterized by several different spectroscopic techniques such as UV–vis, Fourier transform infrared, Raman). The morphology of Zn(II)-porphyrin@GO nanohybrid is investigated by atomic force microscopy (AFM) and transmission electron microscope (TEM)/selected area electron diffraction. Both TEM and AFM measurements indicate that the Zn(II)-porphyrin self-assemble onto the surface of graphene oxide sheets. Steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence emission studies in the dispersed phase, and as a thin film, point toward the strongly quenched fluorescence emission and lifetime decay, suggesting that energy transfer occurs from the singlet excited state of Zn(II)-porphyrin unit to GO sheets.

Co-reporter:Israt S. Alam, Rory L. Arrowsmith, Fernando Cortezon-Tamarit, Frazer Twyman, Gabriele Kociok-Köhn, Stanley W. Botchway, Jonathan R. Dilworth, Laurence Carroll, Eric O. Aboagye and Sofia I. Pascu  
Dalton Transactions 2016 vol. 45(Issue 1) pp:144-155
Publication Date(Web):27 Oct 2015
DOI:10.1039/C5DT02537K
We report the microwave synthesis of several bis(thiosemicarbazones) and the rapid gallium-68 incorporation to give the corresponding metal complexes. These proved kinetically stable under ‘cold’ and ‘hot’ biological assays and were investigated using laser scanning confocal microscopy, flow cytometry and radioactive cell retention studies under normoxia and hypoxia. 68Ga complex retention was found to be 34% higher in hypoxic cells than in normoxic cells over 30 min, further increasing to 53% at 120 min. Our data suggests that this class of gallium complexes show hypoxia selectivity suitable for imaging in living cells and in vivo tests by microPET in nude athymic mice showed that they are excreted within 1 h of their administration.
Co-reporter:Israt S. Alam, Rory L. Arrowsmith, Fernando Cortezon-Tamarit, Frazer Twyman, Gabriele Kociok-Köhn, Stanley W. Botchway, Jonathan R. Dilworth, Laurence Carroll, Eric O. Aboagye and Sofia I. Pascu  
Dalton Transactions 2016 vol. 45(Issue 8) pp:3650-3650
Publication Date(Web):08 Feb 2016
DOI:10.1039/C6DT90021F
Correction for ‘Microwave gallium-68 radiochemistry for kinetically stable bis(thiosemicarbazone) complexes: structural investigations and cellular uptake under hypoxia’ by Israt S. Alam et al., Dalton Trans., 2016, 45, 144–155.
Co-reporter:Ferno Cortezon-Tamarit;Sophia Sarpaki;David G. Calatayud;Vincenzo Mirabello ;Sofia I. Pascu
The Chemical Record 2016 Volume 16( Issue 3) pp:1380-1397
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/tcr.201500292

Abstract

The applications of coordination chemistry to molecular imaging has become a matter of intense research over the past 10 years. In particular, the applications of bis(thiosemicarbazonato) metal complexes in molecular imaging have mainly been focused on compounds with aliphatic backbones due to the in vivo imaging success of hypoxic tumors with PET (positron emission tomography) using 64CuATSM [copper (diacetyl-bis(N4-methylthiosemicarbazone))]. This compound entered clinical trials in the US and the UK during the first decade of the 21st century for imaging hypoxia in head and neck tumors. The replacement of the ligand backbone to aromatic groups, coupled with the exocyclic N's functionalization during the synthesis of bis(thiosemicarbazones) opens the possibility to use the corresponding metal complexes as multimodal imaging agents of use, both in vitro for optical detection, and in vivo when radiolabeled with several different metallic species. The greater kinetic stability of acenaphthenequinone bis(thiosemicarbazonato) metal complexes, with respect to that of the corresponding aliphatic ATSM complexes, allows the stabilization of a number of imaging probes, with special interest in “cold” and “hot” Cu(II) and Ga(III) derivatives for PET applications and 111In(III) derivatives for SPECT (single-photon emission computed tomography) applications, whilst Zn(II) derivatives display optical imaging properties in cells, with enhanced fluorescence emission and lifetime with respect to the free ligands. Preliminary studies have shown that gallium-based acenaphthenequinone bis(thiosemicarbazonato) complexes are also hypoxia selective in vitro, thus increasing the interest in them as new generation imaging agents for in vitro and in vivo applications.

Co-reporter:Vincenzo Mirabello, David G. Calatayud, Rory L. Arrowsmith, Haobo Ge and Sofia I. Pascu  
Journal of Materials Chemistry A 2015 vol. 3(Issue 28) pp:5657-5672
Publication Date(Web):24 Jun 2015
DOI:10.1039/C5TB00841G
Metallic nanoparticles have been a matter of intense exploration within the last decade due to their potential to change the face of the medical world through their role as ‘nanotheranostics’. Their envisaged capacity to act as synthetic platforms for a multimodal imaging approach to diagnosis and treatment of degenerative diseases, including cancer, remains a matter of lively debate. Certain synthetic metal-based nanomaterials, e.g. gold and iron oxide nanoparticles, are already in clinical use or under advanced preclinical investigations following in vitro and in vivo preclinical imaging success. We surveyed the recent publications landscape including those reported metallic nanoparticles having established applications in vivo, as well as some of the new metallic nanoparticles which, despite their potential as cancer nanodiagnostics, are currently awaiting in vivo evaluation. The objective of this review is to highlight the current metallic nanoparticles and/or alloys as well as their derivatives with multimodal imaging potential, focusing on their chemistry as a springboard to discussing their role in the future of nanomedicines design. We also highlight here some of the fundamentals of molecular and nano-imaging techniques of relevance to the metal-based colloids, alloys and metallic nanoparticles discerning their future prospects as cancer nanodiagnostics. The current approaches for metallic and alloy surface derivatisation, aiming to achieve functional and biocompatible materials for multimodal bioimaging applications, are discussed in order to bring about some new perspectives on the efficiency of metallic nanoparticles as synthetic scaffolds for imaging probe design and forecast their future use in medical imaging techniques (optical, CT, PET, SPECT and MRI).
Co-reporter:Zhiyuan Hu, Rory L. Arrowsmith, James A. Tyson, Vincenzo Mirabello, Haobo Ge, Ian M. Eggleston, Stanley W. Botchway, G. Dan Pantos and Sofia I. Pascu  
Chemical Communications 2015 vol. 51(Issue 32) pp:6901-6904
Publication Date(Web):16 Jan 2015
DOI:10.1039/C4CC08265F
We have developed a fluorescent peptide conjugate (TrpNDIRGDfK) based on the coupling of cyclo(RGDfK) to a new tryptophan-tagged amino acid naphthalenediimide (TrpNDI). Confocal fluorescence microscopy coupled with fluorescence lifetime imaging (FLIM) mapping, single and two-photon fluorescence excitation, lifetime components and corresponding decay profiles were used as parameters able to investigate qualitatively the cellular behavior regarding the molecular environment and biolocalisation of TrpNDI and TrpNDI–RGDfK in cancer cells.
Co-reporter:Rory L. Arrowsmith, Anthony J. Atkin, Stanley W. Botchway, Ian J. S. Fairlamb, Jason M. Lynam, James W. B. Moir, Sofia I. Pascu, Jonathan S. Ward and Wei-Qiang Zhang  
Dalton Transactions 2015 vol. 44(Issue 11) pp:4957-4962
Publication Date(Web):2014/12/04
DOI:10.1039/C4DT03312D
The synthesis of a new pyrene-containing Fischer carbene complex is described. The complex has a broad absorbance spectrum between 300 and 400 nm and, on excitation at 345 nm in CH2Cl2 solution, emission is observed at 395 and 415 nm. Emission is also observed in PBS buffer, but in this case the resulting spectra are much broader. Confocal and fluorescence lifetime imaging indicate that emission occurs on treating HeLa cells with the complex and co-localisation studies demonstrate that this is from the mitochondria and lipid-rich regions of the cell.
Co-reporter:Su-Ying Xu, Xiaolong Sun, Haobo Ge, Rory L. Arrowsmith, John S. Fossey, Sofia I. Pascu, Yun-Bao Jiang and Tony D. James  
Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry 2015 vol. 13(Issue 14) pp:4143-4148
Publication Date(Web):04 Dec 2014
DOI:10.1039/C4OB02267J
A biocompatible fluoride receptor has been developed where the interaction between the boronic acid ester and amine (NH) results in fluoride ion selectivity and enhanced fluorescence quenching.
Co-reporter:Jonathan R. Dilworth, Sofia I. Pascu, Philip A. Waghorn, Daniela Vullo, Simon R. Bayly, Martin Christlieb, Xin Sun and Claudiu T. Supuran  
Dalton Transactions 2015 vol. 44(Issue 11) pp:4859-4873
Publication Date(Web):25 Feb 2015
DOI:10.1039/C4DT03206C
Carbonic anhydrase IX (CA IX) is currently generating great interest as a marker of tumour hypoxia and a potential chemotherapeutic target. In order to test the principle that a CA IX inhibitor could be used for targeting PET or SPECT metallic radioisotopes to tumours we have prepared a number of conjugates involving aryl-sulfonamides or an acetazolamide derivative linked to a range of copper, indium, rhenium, 99m-technetium and zinc complexes. Radiolabelled 64Cu and 99mTc analogues of the ‘cold’ Cu and some of the Re complexes were prepared in good radiochemical incorporation. Inhibition of various human carbonic anhydrase isoforms (I, II, IX and XII) was tested with the ‘cold’, non-radiolabelled complexes, and compared with an acetazolamide standard (AZA). The molecular structure of a new, tri-sulfonated porphyrin-labeled sulfonamide was determined using synchrotron X-ray crystallography.
Co-reporter:Meng Li, Haobo Ge, Rory L. Arrowsmith, Vincenzo Mirabello, Stanley W. Botchway, Weihong Zhu, Sofia I. Pascu and Tony D. James  
Chemical Communications 2014 vol. 50(Issue 80) pp:11806-11809
Publication Date(Web):04 Jun 2014
DOI:10.1039/C4CC03453H
Copper ions are essential for many biological processes. However, high concentrations of copper can be detrimental to the cell or organism. A novel naphthalimide derivative bearing a monoboronic acid group (BNP) was investigated as a Cu2+ selective fluorescent sensor in living cells. This derivative is one of the rare examples of reversible fluorescent chemosensors for Cu2+ which uses a boronic acid group for a binding site. Moreover, the adduct BNP–Cu2+ displays a fluorescence enhancement with fructose. The uptake of this novel compound in HeLa cancer cells was imaged using confocal fluorescence microscopy techniques including two-photon fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy.
Co-reporter:Katherine Lawrence, Fengjie Xia, Rory L. Arrowsmith, Haobo Ge, Geoffrey W. Nelson, John S. Foord, Mónica Felipe-Sotelo, Nick D. M. Evans, John M. Mitchels, Stephen E. Flower, Stanley W. Botchway, Daniel Wolverson, Gazi N. Aliev, Tony D. James, Sofia I. Pascu, and Frank Marken
Langmuir 2014 Volume 30(Issue 39) pp:11746-11752
Publication Date(Web):2017-2-22
DOI:10.1021/la404866s
A novel two-photon-fluorescent N,O-heteroatom-rich carbon nanomaterial has been synthesized and characterized. The new carbon nanoparticles were produced by hydrothermal conversion from a one-photon-fluorescent poly(4-vinylpyridine) precursor (P4VP). The carbonized particles (cP4VP dots) with nonuniform particle diameter (ranging from sub-6 to 20 nm with some aggregates up to 200 nm) exhibit strong fluorescence properties in different solvents and have also been investigated for applications in cell culture media. The cP4VP dots retain their intrinsic fluorescence in a cellular environment and exhibit an average excited-state lifetime of 2.0 ± 0.9 ns in the cell. The cP4VP dots enter HeLa cells and do not cause significant damage to outer cell membranes. They provide one-photon or two-photon fluorescent synthetic scaffolds for imaging applications and/or drug delivery.
Co-reporter:Sofia Pascu;Jon Dilworth
Journal of Labelled Compounds and Radiopharmaceuticals 2014 Volume 57( Issue 4) pp:191-194
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/jlcr.3196

First page of article

Co-reporter:Rhodri E. Owen;Dr. Justin P. O'Byrne;Dr. Davide Mattia;Dr. Pawel Plucinski;Dr. Sofia I. Pascu;Dr. Matthew D. Jones
ChemPlusChem 2013 Volume 78( Issue 12) pp:1536-1544
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/cplu.201300263

Abstract

If CO2 hydrogenation is to become a viable process for the utilisation of CO2, improved catalysts are urgently needed. We report the promotional effects of Group 11 and 13 metals on the performance of iron–silica catalyst systems under atmospheric pressure. The addition of low loadings of gold resulted in a significant improvement in catalyst performance both in terms of conversion and selectivity to lower (C2–C4) olefins. Small loadings of indium proved highly effective for increasing CO2 conversion, whereas at higher loadings the selectivity to lower olefins could be dramatically increased. Catalysis tests involving palladium-promoted systems also proved successful with large increases in selectivity towards C5+ hydrocarbons observed. The catalysts were characterised by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, TEM and SEM, which confirmed the nanostructured nature of the catalytic species involved.

Co-reporter:Dr. Navaratnarajah Kuganathan;Edward Veal; Malcolm L. H. Green; Jennifer C. Green;Dr. Sofia I. Pascu
ChemPlusChem 2013 Volume 78( Issue 11) pp:1413-1420
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/cplu.201300214

Abstract

DFT calculations on palladium(II) methyl complexes incorporating P/N ligands demonstrate that CO activation in the presence of competing ligands, such as CH3CN or C2H4, occurs through an associative mechanism involving CO/ligand exchange, followed by migratory insertion of CO into the PdMe bond. Recent investigations into the PdII coordination of CO and C2H4 and their subsequent insertion into the PdMe bonds of complexes of the type [PdMe(iminophosphine)(NCMe)]+ are reported.

Co-reporter:Zhiyuan Hu;G. Dan Panto&x15f;;Navaratnarajah Kuganathan;Rory L. Arrowsmith;Robert M. J. Jacobs;Gabriele Kociok-Köhn;Justin O'Byrne;Kerstin Jurkschat;Pierre Burgos;Rex M. Tyrrell;Stan W. Botchway;Jeremy K. M. Sers;Sofia I. Pascu
Advanced Functional Materials 2012 Volume 22( Issue 3) pp:503-518
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/adfm.201101932

Abstract

A new synthetic route to functionalized single walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) via supramolecular interactions using a specifically designed naphthalenediimide (NDI) nanoreceptor is demonstrated. The tendency of the NDI to spontaneously form composites with carbon nanomaterials leads to fluorescent amino acid tagged SWNTs, which are dispersible in widely accessible organic solvents (CHCl3, DMSO) as well as in biocompatible cell medium (EMEM, Eagle's modified essential medium). The X-ray crystal structure of the first iodine-tagged and amino acid-functionalized NDI molecule, designed especially to facilitate the high resolution transmission electron microscopy (HR TEM) imaging whilst retaining its ability to self-assemble into a nanodimensional receptor in weakly polar solvents, is also described. A new hybrid material, NDI@SWNT, was prepared and characterized as dispersed in organic solvents and aqueous media and in the solid state by HR TEM, tapping mode atomic force microscopy (TM AFM), scanning electron microscopy (SEM), circular dichroism, Raman and fluorescence spectroscopies (steady-state single and two-photon techniques). Combined microscopy techniques, density functional theory (DFT) calculations using the Spanish Initiative for Electronic Simulations with Thousands of Atoms (SIESTA) program and spectroscopic measurements in solution indicate that amino acid-functionalized NDI interacts strongly with SWNTs and forms a donor-acceptor complex. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations predicted the geometry and the binding energies of an NDI molecule loaded onto a SWNT strand and the possibility of charge transfer interactions within the hybrid. The NDI@SWNT composite translocates into cells (e.g. FEK-4, HeLa, MCF-7) as an intact object and localizes in the cells' cytoplasm and partially in the nucleus. The NDI coating enhances the biocompatibility of SWNTs and mediates its intracellular localization as shown by confocal fluorescence imaging and fluorescence lifetime imaging (FLIM) techniques. The excited state fluorescence lifetime of the probes in cells versus solution phase indicates that the probes remain unaffected by the change in their chemical environment within the experimental timescale (2 h).

Co-reporter:Zhiyuan Hu;G. Dan Panto&x15f;;Navaratnarajah Kuganathan;Rory L. Arrowsmith;Robert M. J. Jacobs;Gabriele Kociok-Köhn;Justin O'Byrne;Kerstin Jurkschat;Pierre Burgos;Rex M. Tyrrell;Stan W. Botchway;Jeremy K. M. Sers;Sofia I. Pascu
Advanced Functional Materials 2012 Volume 22( Issue 3) pp:
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/adfm.201290015
Co-reporter:Lok H. Tong, Paolo Pengo, William Clegg, John P. Lowe, Paul R. Raithby, Jeremy K. M. Sanders and Sofia I. Pascu  
Dalton Transactions 2011 vol. 40(Issue 41) pp:10833-10842
Publication Date(Web):22 Jul 2011
DOI:10.1039/C1DT10880H
New donor–acceptor hybrids of Zn(II)-metallated 5,15-diaryl porphyrins have been designed and synthesised via the porphyrin interactions with an electron acceptor molecule, di-n-hexylN-substituted 1,2,4,8-naphthalenetetracarboxylic diimide (NDI). Binding interactions within these supramolecular complexes were investigated in the solid state by synchrotron X-ray diffraction and probed in solution by 1H NMR spectroscopy. The systematic modulation of the porphyrin π-density was achieved, for the first time as multiple methoxy and fluorine groups were introduced as substituents to the 5,15-diaryls of the porphyrin. For these, the variation of the porphyrin–NDI binding strengths determined by 1H NMR titrations was shown, using the Swain's type dual parameter approach, to be closely linked with the peripheral substitution pattern of the diaryl porphyrins validated by crystallography. The new 1:1 donor–acceptor complexes formed display characteristic features of the aromatic-stacked systems, i.e. the parallel arrangement and short interplanar separation between the substituted porphyrin and NDI. Synthetic modification of electron-density on the porphyrin surface by introducing substituents at peripheral sites of functionalised porphyrins represent a general solution towards electronically tunable aromatic surfaces: an understanding of their solution and solid state behaviour will significantly improve the rational design of new functional donor–acceptor supramolecular materials with potential applications ranging from new energy materials to dye-sensitised solar cells, photovoltaics and future drug delivery devices.
Co-reporter:Rory L. Arrowsmith, Philip A. Waghorn, Michael W. Jones, Andreas Bauman, Simon K. Brayshaw, Zhiyuan Hu, Gabriele Kociok-Köhn, Thomas L. Mindt, Rex M. Tyrrell, Stanley W. Botchway, Jonathan R. Dilworth and Sofia I. Pascu  
Dalton Transactions 2011 vol. 40(Issue 23) pp:6238-6252
Publication Date(Web):19 May 2011
DOI:10.1039/C1DT10126A
New fluorescent and biocompatible aromatic Ga(III)- and In(III)-bis(thiosemicarbazonato) complexes for dual mode optical and PET or SPECT molecular imaging have been synthesised via a synthetic method based on transmetallation reactions from Zn(II) precursors. Complexes have been fully characterised in the solid state by single crystal X-ray diffraction and in solution by spectroscopic methods (UV/Vis, fluorescence, 1H and 13C{1H} NMR). The bis(thiosemicarbazones) radiolabelled rapidly in high yields under mild conditions with 111In (a gamma and Auger emitter for SPECT imaging and radiotherapy with t1/2 = 2.8 d) and 68Ga (a generator-available positron emitter for PET imaging with t1/2 = 68 min). Cytotoxicity and biolocalisation studies using confocal fluorescence imaging and fluorescence lifetime imaging (FLIM) techniques have been used to study their in vitro activities and stabilities in HeLa and PC-3 cells to ascertain their suitability as synthetic scaffolds for future multimodality molecular imaging in cancer diagnosis and therapy. The observation that the indium complexes show certain nuclear uptake could be of relevance towards developing 111In therapeutic agents based on Auger electron emission to induce DNA damage.
Co-reporter:Sofia I. Pascu, Gabor Balazs, Jennifer C. Green, Malcolm L.H. Green, Ino C. Vei, John E. Warren, Caroline Windsor
Inorganica Chimica Acta 2010 Volume 363(Issue 6) pp:1157-1172
Publication Date(Web):5 April 2010
DOI:10.1016/j.ica.2009.11.009
Novel square planar Pd(II) α-diimines [PdX2{ArNC(Cl)}2], where Ar = C6H5, (2,6-Me2C6H3), (2,6-iPr2C6H3) and X = Cl or Br, and the octahedral Ni(II) complex [NiBr2{(C6H5)NC(Cl)}2(THF)2] have been prepared and characterised by spectroscopic methods. For two of the Pd(II) complexes and the Ni(II) complex the crystal structures were determined by X-ray crystallography. A further insight into the geometry and electronic structure of [PdBr2{(2,6-Me2C6H3)NC(Cl)}2] was gained using density functional theoretical calculations (DFT). This compound resembles structurally and electronically typical olefin polymerisation pre-catalysts supported by α-diimines incorporating methyl- and 1,8-naphtalenyl substituents at the ligand backbone. The chlorine-substituted backbone of the free ligand [2,6-Me2C6H3NC(Cl)]2 can be employed in further alkylation reactions to generate new multifunctional ligand prototypes with potential uses as ansa-metallocene/diimines building blocks for catalytic applications of heterobimetallic complexes.This paper describes solution, solid state and DFT-level theoretical investigations into a new class of palladium and nickel diimines and an accessible route towards new multifunctional ligand prototypes with potential uses as ansa-metallocene/diimines building blocks for heterobimetallic catalysis applications.
Co-reporter:SofiaI. Pascu Dr.;PhilipA. Waghorn;BrettW.C. Kennedy;RoryL. Arrowsmith;SimonR. Bayly Dr.;JonathanR. Dilworth ;Martin Christlieb Dr.;RexM. Tyrrell ;Julia Zhong Dr.;RadoslawM. Kowalczyk Dr.;David Collison ;ParvinderK. Aley Dr.;GrantC. Churchill Dr.;FranklinI. Aigbirhio Dr.
Chemistry – An Asian Journal 2010 Volume 5( Issue 3) pp:506-519
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/asia.200900446

Abstract

Copper bis(4-ethyl-3-thiosemicarbazonato) acenaphthenequinone (1) and copper bis(4-methyl-3-thiosemicarbazonato) acenaphthenequinone (2) are synthesized and characterized in solution, in the solid state, and radiolabeled. Serum-protein binding radioassays show good stability in solution and about 25 % binding to protein over 1 h, which is comparable with the hypoxia selective tracer [64Cu(ATSM)]. Cyclic voltammetry shows fast and reversible reduction at redox potentials similar to the values known for hypoxia-selective copper compounds. However, despite this, complex 1 does not show any hypoxic-selective uptake in HeLa cells over 1-h standard assays. Possible reasons for this are studied by using the intrinsic fluorescence of the CuII complexes to determine the cellular distributions and uptake mechanism by confocal microscopy. The complexes are found to bind to the external cell membrane and disperse evenly in the cytoplasm only after a very slow cell internalization (>1 h). No significant changes in distribution are observed by fluorescence imaging under hypoxic conditions. The rate of localization in the cytoplasm contrasts with their ZnII analogues, which are known to have fast cell uptake (up to 20 min) and a clear localization in lysosomes and mitochondria. The cytotoxicity mechanism of 1 over 24 h against a number of adherent cell lines is seen to be by membrane disruption and is of a comparable magnitude to that of [Cu(ATSM)], as demonstrated by methyl tetrazolium (MTT) and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) assays.

Co-reporter:LokH. Tong Dr.;Jean-Luc Wietor Dr.;William Clegg ;PaulR. Raithby ;SofiaI. Pascu Dr.;JeremyK.M. Sers
Chemistry - A European Journal 2008 Volume 14( Issue 10) pp:3035-3044
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/chem.200701686

Abstract

The self-assembly of two tripodal porphyrin hosts in the presence of C60, in the solid state, has been studied using synchrotron X-ray crystallography, and in solution by using 1H NMR and fluorescence spectroscopies. The binding affinities, stoichiometries and geometries strongly depend on the size of the porphyrin host. Intramolecular and/or intermolecular porphyrin–fullerene interactions are observed in the co-crystallites and in each case, the trimer exhibits a “tweezers-like” structural motif. The solid-state structures of the trimer-fullerene co-crystallites reveal close fullerene–porphyrin and fullerene–fullerene contacts.

Co-reporter:Jonathan R. Dilworth, Sofia I. Pascu, Philip A. Waghorn, Daniela Vullo, Simon R. Bayly, Martin Christlieb, Xin Sun and Claudiu T. Supuran
Dalton Transactions 2015 - vol. 44(Issue 11) pp:NaN4873-4873
Publication Date(Web):2015/02/25
DOI:10.1039/C4DT03206C
Carbonic anhydrase IX (CA IX) is currently generating great interest as a marker of tumour hypoxia and a potential chemotherapeutic target. In order to test the principle that a CA IX inhibitor could be used for targeting PET or SPECT metallic radioisotopes to tumours we have prepared a number of conjugates involving aryl-sulfonamides or an acetazolamide derivative linked to a range of copper, indium, rhenium, 99m-technetium and zinc complexes. Radiolabelled 64Cu and 99mTc analogues of the ‘cold’ Cu and some of the Re complexes were prepared in good radiochemical incorporation. Inhibition of various human carbonic anhydrase isoforms (I, II, IX and XII) was tested with the ‘cold’, non-radiolabelled complexes, and compared with an acetazolamide standard (AZA). The molecular structure of a new, tri-sulfonated porphyrin-labeled sulfonamide was determined using synchrotron X-ray crystallography.
Co-reporter:Israt S. Alam, Rory L. Arrowsmith, Fernando Cortezon-Tamarit, Frazer Twyman, Gabriele Kociok-Köhn, Stanley W. Botchway, Jonathan R. Dilworth, Laurence Carroll, Eric O. Aboagye and Sofia I. Pascu
Dalton Transactions 2016 - vol. 45(Issue 1) pp:NaN155-155
Publication Date(Web):2015/10/27
DOI:10.1039/C5DT02537K
We report the microwave synthesis of several bis(thiosemicarbazones) and the rapid gallium-68 incorporation to give the corresponding metal complexes. These proved kinetically stable under ‘cold’ and ‘hot’ biological assays and were investigated using laser scanning confocal microscopy, flow cytometry and radioactive cell retention studies under normoxia and hypoxia. 68Ga complex retention was found to be 34% higher in hypoxic cells than in normoxic cells over 30 min, further increasing to 53% at 120 min. Our data suggests that this class of gallium complexes show hypoxia selectivity suitable for imaging in living cells and in vivo tests by microPET in nude athymic mice showed that they are excreted within 1 h of their administration.
Co-reporter:Rory L. Arrowsmith, Philip A. Waghorn, Michael W. Jones, Andreas Bauman, Simon K. Brayshaw, Zhiyuan Hu, Gabriele Kociok-Köhn, Thomas L. Mindt, Rex M. Tyrrell, Stanley W. Botchway, Jonathan R. Dilworth and Sofia I. Pascu
Dalton Transactions 2011 - vol. 40(Issue 23) pp:NaN6252-6252
Publication Date(Web):2011/05/19
DOI:10.1039/C1DT10126A
New fluorescent and biocompatible aromatic Ga(III)- and In(III)-bis(thiosemicarbazonato) complexes for dual mode optical and PET or SPECT molecular imaging have been synthesised via a synthetic method based on transmetallation reactions from Zn(II) precursors. Complexes have been fully characterised in the solid state by single crystal X-ray diffraction and in solution by spectroscopic methods (UV/Vis, fluorescence, 1H and 13C{1H} NMR). The bis(thiosemicarbazones) radiolabelled rapidly in high yields under mild conditions with 111In (a gamma and Auger emitter for SPECT imaging and radiotherapy with t1/2 = 2.8 d) and 68Ga (a generator-available positron emitter for PET imaging with t1/2 = 68 min). Cytotoxicity and biolocalisation studies using confocal fluorescence imaging and fluorescence lifetime imaging (FLIM) techniques have been used to study their in vitro activities and stabilities in HeLa and PC-3 cells to ascertain their suitability as synthetic scaffolds for future multimodality molecular imaging in cancer diagnosis and therapy. The observation that the indium complexes show certain nuclear uptake could be of relevance towards developing 111In therapeutic agents based on Auger electron emission to induce DNA damage.
Co-reporter:Lok H. Tong, Paolo Pengo, William Clegg, John P. Lowe, Paul R. Raithby, Jeremy K. M. Sanders and Sofia I. Pascu
Dalton Transactions 2011 - vol. 40(Issue 41) pp:NaN10842-10842
Publication Date(Web):2011/07/22
DOI:10.1039/C1DT10880H
New donor–acceptor hybrids of Zn(II)-metallated 5,15-diaryl porphyrins have been designed and synthesised via the porphyrin interactions with an electron acceptor molecule, di-n-hexylN-substituted 1,2,4,8-naphthalenetetracarboxylic diimide (NDI). Binding interactions within these supramolecular complexes were investigated in the solid state by synchrotron X-ray diffraction and probed in solution by 1H NMR spectroscopy. The systematic modulation of the porphyrin π-density was achieved, for the first time as multiple methoxy and fluorine groups were introduced as substituents to the 5,15-diaryls of the porphyrin. For these, the variation of the porphyrin–NDI binding strengths determined by 1H NMR titrations was shown, using the Swain's type dual parameter approach, to be closely linked with the peripheral substitution pattern of the diaryl porphyrins validated by crystallography. The new 1:1 donor–acceptor complexes formed display characteristic features of the aromatic-stacked systems, i.e. the parallel arrangement and short interplanar separation between the substituted porphyrin and NDI. Synthetic modification of electron-density on the porphyrin surface by introducing substituents at peripheral sites of functionalised porphyrins represent a general solution towards electronically tunable aromatic surfaces: an understanding of their solution and solid state behaviour will significantly improve the rational design of new functional donor–acceptor supramolecular materials with potential applications ranging from new energy materials to dye-sensitised solar cells, photovoltaics and future drug delivery devices.
Co-reporter:Vincenzo Mirabello, David G. Calatayud, Rory L. Arrowsmith, Haobo Ge and Sofia I. Pascu
Journal of Materials Chemistry A 2015 - vol. 3(Issue 28) pp:NaN5672-5672
Publication Date(Web):2015/06/24
DOI:10.1039/C5TB00841G
Metallic nanoparticles have been a matter of intense exploration within the last decade due to their potential to change the face of the medical world through their role as ‘nanotheranostics’. Their envisaged capacity to act as synthetic platforms for a multimodal imaging approach to diagnosis and treatment of degenerative diseases, including cancer, remains a matter of lively debate. Certain synthetic metal-based nanomaterials, e.g. gold and iron oxide nanoparticles, are already in clinical use or under advanced preclinical investigations following in vitro and in vivo preclinical imaging success. We surveyed the recent publications landscape including those reported metallic nanoparticles having established applications in vivo, as well as some of the new metallic nanoparticles which, despite their potential as cancer nanodiagnostics, are currently awaiting in vivo evaluation. The objective of this review is to highlight the current metallic nanoparticles and/or alloys as well as their derivatives with multimodal imaging potential, focusing on their chemistry as a springboard to discussing their role in the future of nanomedicines design. We also highlight here some of the fundamentals of molecular and nano-imaging techniques of relevance to the metal-based colloids, alloys and metallic nanoparticles discerning their future prospects as cancer nanodiagnostics. The current approaches for metallic and alloy surface derivatisation, aiming to achieve functional and biocompatible materials for multimodal bioimaging applications, are discussed in order to bring about some new perspectives on the efficiency of metallic nanoparticles as synthetic scaffolds for imaging probe design and forecast their future use in medical imaging techniques (optical, CT, PET, SPECT and MRI).
Co-reporter:Zhiyuan Hu, Rory L. Arrowsmith, James A. Tyson, Vincenzo Mirabello, Haobo Ge, Ian M. Eggleston, Stanley W. Botchway, G. Dan Pantos and Sofia I. Pascu
Chemical Communications 2015 - vol. 51(Issue 32) pp:NaN6904-6904
Publication Date(Web):2015/01/16
DOI:10.1039/C4CC08265F
We have developed a fluorescent peptide conjugate (TrpNDIRGDfK) based on the coupling of cyclo(RGDfK) to a new tryptophan-tagged amino acid naphthalenediimide (TrpNDI). Confocal fluorescence microscopy coupled with fluorescence lifetime imaging (FLIM) mapping, single and two-photon fluorescence excitation, lifetime components and corresponding decay profiles were used as parameters able to investigate qualitatively the cellular behavior regarding the molecular environment and biolocalisation of TrpNDI and TrpNDI–RGDfK in cancer cells.
Co-reporter:Meng Li, Haobo Ge, Rory L. Arrowsmith, Vincenzo Mirabello, Stanley W. Botchway, Weihong Zhu, Sofia I. Pascu and Tony D. James
Chemical Communications 2014 - vol. 50(Issue 80) pp:NaN11809-11809
Publication Date(Web):2014/06/04
DOI:10.1039/C4CC03453H
Copper ions are essential for many biological processes. However, high concentrations of copper can be detrimental to the cell or organism. A novel naphthalimide derivative bearing a monoboronic acid group (BNP) was investigated as a Cu2+ selective fluorescent sensor in living cells. This derivative is one of the rare examples of reversible fluorescent chemosensors for Cu2+ which uses a boronic acid group for a binding site. Moreover, the adduct BNP–Cu2+ displays a fluorescence enhancement with fructose. The uptake of this novel compound in HeLa cancer cells was imaged using confocal fluorescence microscopy techniques including two-photon fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy.
Co-reporter:Israt S. Alam, Rory L. Arrowsmith, Fernando Cortezon-Tamarit, Frazer Twyman, Gabriele Kociok-Köhn, Stanley W. Botchway, Jonathan R. Dilworth, Laurence Carroll, Eric O. Aboagye and Sofia I. Pascu
Dalton Transactions 2016 - vol. 45(Issue 8) pp:NaN3650-3650
Publication Date(Web):2016/02/08
DOI:10.1039/C6DT90021F
Correction for ‘Microwave gallium-68 radiochemistry for kinetically stable bis(thiosemicarbazone) complexes: structural investigations and cellular uptake under hypoxia’ by Israt S. Alam et al., Dalton Trans., 2016, 45, 144–155.
Co-reporter:Su-Ying Xu, Xiaolong Sun, Haobo Ge, Rory L. Arrowsmith, John S. Fossey, Sofia I. Pascu, Yun-Bao Jiang and Tony D. James
Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry 2015 - vol. 13(Issue 14) pp:NaN4148-4148
Publication Date(Web):2014/12/04
DOI:10.1039/C4OB02267J
A biocompatible fluoride receptor has been developed where the interaction between the boronic acid ester and amine (NH) results in fluoride ion selectivity and enhanced fluorescence quenching.
Co-reporter:Rory L. Arrowsmith, Anthony J. Atkin, Stanley W. Botchway, Ian J. S. Fairlamb, Jason M. Lynam, James W. B. Moir, Sofia I. Pascu, Jonathan S. Ward and Wei-Qiang Zhang
Dalton Transactions 2015 - vol. 44(Issue 11) pp:NaN4962-4962
Publication Date(Web):2014/12/04
DOI:10.1039/C4DT03312D
The synthesis of a new pyrene-containing Fischer carbene complex is described. The complex has a broad absorbance spectrum between 300 and 400 nm and, on excitation at 345 nm in CH2Cl2 solution, emission is observed at 395 and 415 nm. Emission is also observed in PBS buffer, but in this case the resulting spectra are much broader. Confocal and fluorescence lifetime imaging indicate that emission occurs on treating HeLa cells with the complex and co-localisation studies demonstrate that this is from the mitochondria and lipid-rich regions of the cell.
1H-Pyrrole-2-carboxylic acid, 4-hexyl-3,5-dimethyl-, phenylmethyl ester
POLY(1-OXO-1,3-PROPANEDIYL)
lithium pyren-1-ide
Nonadecane, 9-(bromomethyl)-
9H-fluoren-9-yllithium
butane-2,3-dione bis(N-methylthiosemicarbazone)
1H-Imidazole,1-(4-methylphenyl)-
1H-Pyrrole, 2,2'-methylenebis[3-hexyl-4-methyl-
2,4-Pentanedione, 3-hexyl-