Light-responsive paper strips as CO-releasing material with a colourimetric response

Abstract

Carbon monoxide (CO) is known for its multifaceted role in human physiology, and molecules that release CO in a controlled way have been proposed as therapeutic drugs. In this work, a light-responsive CO-releasing molecule (CORM-Dabsyl) showed a strong colourimetric response upon photochemical CO-release, owing to the tight conjugation of a Mn(i) tricarbonyl centre to a dabsyl chromophoric ligand (L). Whereas the complex was very stable in the dark in nitrogen-purged aqueous media, CO-release was effectively triggered using 405 nm irradiation. CORM-Dabsyl, L and the inactive product iCORM-Dabsyl have been investigated by DFT and TD-DFT calculations. Only mild toxicity of CORM-Dabsyl was observed against LX-2 and HepaRG® human cell lines (IC50 ∼ 30 μM). Finally, to develop a CO storage and release material that is readily applicable to therapeutic situations, CORM-Dabsyl was loaded on low-cost and easily disposable paper strips, from which the light triggered CO-release was conveniently visible with the naked eye.

Description
Keywords
Aqueous media, Human cell lines, Human physiology, Low costs, Naked-eye, Td-dft calculations, Therapeutic drugs
Citation
Reddy G., U., Liu, J., Hoffmann, P., Steinmetzer, J., Görls, H., Kupfer, S., et al. (2017). Light-responsive paper strips as CO-releasing material with a colourimetric response. 8(9). https://doi.org//10.1039/c7sc01692a
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License
CC BY 3.0 Unported