Luminescence Properties of Self-Aggregating Tb III-DOTA-Functionalized Calix[4]arenes

Frontiers in Chemistry, Frontiers Media, 2018, 6, pp.1

Florian Mayer1, Sriram Tiruvadi Krishnan1, Daniel T Schühle1, Svetlana V Eliseeva2, Stéphane Petoud2, Éva Tóth2, Kristina Djanashvili1,2,3

 

 

1 Department of Biotechnology, Delft University of Technology, Delft, Netherlands.

2 Centre de Biophysique Moléculaire, UPR 4301 Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Université d'Orléans, Orléans, France.

3 Le Studium, Loire Valley Institute for Advanced Studies, Orléans, France.

Abstract

Self-aggregating calix[4]arenes carrying four DOTA ligands on the upper rim for stable complexation of paramagnetic Gd III-ions have already been proposed as MRI probes. In this work, we investigate the luminescence properties of Tb III-DOTA-calix[4]arene-4OPr containing four propyl-groups and compare them with those of the analog substituted with a phthalimide chromophore (Tb III-DOTA-calix[4]arene-3OPr-OPhth). We show that, given its four aromatic rings, the calix[4]arene core acts as an effective sensitizer of Tb-centered luminescence. Substituents on the lower rim can modulate the aggregation behavior, which in turn determines the luminescence properties of the compounds. In solid state, the quantum yield of the phthalimide derivative is almost three times as high as that of the propyl-functionalized analog demonstrating a beneficial role of the chromophore on Tb-luminescence. In solution, however, the effect of the phthalimide group vanishes, which we attribute to the large distance between the chromophore and the lanthanide, situated on the opposite rims of the calix[4]arene. Both quantum yields and luminescence lifetimes show clear concentration dependence in solution, related to the strong impact of aggregation on the luminescence behavior. We also evidence the variability in the values of the critical micelle concentration depending on the experimental technique. Such luminescent calix[4]arene platforms accommodating stable lanthanide complexes can be considered valuable building blocks for the design of dual MR/optical imaging probes.

Keywords

DOTA-chelates
Calix[4]arenes
lanthanides
Luminescence
Optical imaging
Terbium
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Frontiers in Chemistry