Highly symmetric Ln(iii) boron-containing macrocycles as bright fluorophores for living cell imaging†
Abstract
Boron-assisted highly symmetric lanthanide (Ln) macrocycles, (η2-catechol-μ-catecholborate)3Ln(Ph3PO)2·xC7H8 (Ln = Dy, x = 0, Dy-B-Ph3PO; Ln = Yb, x = 1, Yb-B-Ph3PO) have been achieved by a one-pot reaction of Ln[N(TMS)2]3 (TMS = –SiMe3) with excess catecholborane (HBCat) in the presence of Ph3PO. Both macrocycles exhibit high brightness and long lifetimes benefitting from the combination of the rigid molecular backbone and the diminishing detrimental high energy X–H (X = C, N and O) vibrations. In particular, Dy-B-Ph3PO exhibited the longest 4F9/2 lifetime beyond 200 μs to date. When (4-(anthracen-9-yl)phenyl)diphenylphosphine oxide (AnPh3PO) was used as the antenna ligand, a highly luminescent NIR bioprobe, Yb-B-AnPh3PO, showing no apparent cell toxicity and high quality in vitro imaging, was obtained. Furthermore, the synthetic versatility of this system permits additional investigations of multifunctional Ln molecular materials in the future.
- This article is part of the themed collection: FOCUS: Recent progress on bioimaging technologies