Fullerol is a fullerene derivative that is extensively hydroxylated [nano-C(60)(OH)(24)] and this makes it water-soluble. These fullerene derivatives have shown promise as drug carriers that bypass ocular barriers but fullerols are also potentially phototoxic to human lens and retinal tissues. Fluorescence imaging is a powerful and non-invasive means of probing nanoparticles in biological systems. However, fullerol nanoparticles have a very low level of fluorescence and have not as yet been imaged in vitro and in vivo. Using specialized measurements including time-correlated single photon counting (TCSPC), fullerol fluorescence was determined in aqueous solutions and detected in both human lens and retinal pigment epithelial cells. Time-resolved fluorescence of fullerol (5-200 mu M) was characterized in aqueous environment, where the fluorescence decay is best fitted with three lifetimes (3 ns, 0.7-0.9 ns and 0.2 ns). Time-resolved microspectrofluorimetry and time-gated fluorescence imaging were performed on both human lens and retinal pigment epithelial cells incubated with increasing fullerol doses (5-500 mu M and 5-50 mu M, respectively). Upon increasing concentration, we observe some shortening of the lifetimes, a reduction in the relative amplitude of the shortest-living component and a corresponding increase in the weight of the intermediate-living species. Time-gated imaging of fullerol fluorescence provided information on its intracellular distribution that correlates with progressive cell damage. Therefore time-gated imaging may potentially be used as a means to investigate fullerol distribution and toxicity in the human lens and retina in vivo.

Fullerol in human lens and retinal pigment epithelial cells: time domain fluorescence spectroscopy and imaging

Taroni Paola;D'Andrea Cosimo;Cubeddu Rinaldo;
2011

Abstract

Fullerol is a fullerene derivative that is extensively hydroxylated [nano-C(60)(OH)(24)] and this makes it water-soluble. These fullerene derivatives have shown promise as drug carriers that bypass ocular barriers but fullerols are also potentially phototoxic to human lens and retinal tissues. Fluorescence imaging is a powerful and non-invasive means of probing nanoparticles in biological systems. However, fullerol nanoparticles have a very low level of fluorescence and have not as yet been imaged in vitro and in vivo. Using specialized measurements including time-correlated single photon counting (TCSPC), fullerol fluorescence was determined in aqueous solutions and detected in both human lens and retinal pigment epithelial cells. Time-resolved fluorescence of fullerol (5-200 mu M) was characterized in aqueous environment, where the fluorescence decay is best fitted with three lifetimes (3 ns, 0.7-0.9 ns and 0.2 ns). Time-resolved microspectrofluorimetry and time-gated fluorescence imaging were performed on both human lens and retinal pigment epithelial cells incubated with increasing fullerol doses (5-500 mu M and 5-50 mu M, respectively). Upon increasing concentration, we observe some shortening of the lifetimes, a reduction in the relative amplitude of the shortest-living component and a corresponding increase in the weight of the intermediate-living species. Time-gated imaging of fullerol fluorescence provided information on its intracellular distribution that correlates with progressive cell damage. Therefore time-gated imaging may potentially be used as a means to investigate fullerol distribution and toxicity in the human lens and retina in vivo.
2011
Istituto di fotonica e nanotecnologie - IFN
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/273856
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