Effect of Self-association and Protein Binding on the Photochemical Reactivity of Triarylmethanes. Implications of Noncovalent Interactions on the Competition between Photosensitization Mechanisms Type I and Type II |
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Authors: | Jeremy A. Bartlett Guilherme L. Indig |
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Affiliation: | School of Pharmacy, University of Wisconsin, Madison 53706-1515, USA. |
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Abstract: | We have explored the photochemical behavior of cationic triarylmethane dye monomers and dimers free in solution and noncovalently bound to bovine serum albumin (BSA) and examined how self-association and the formation of host-guest complexes involving biopolymers and photosensitizers affect the competition between the photosensitization type I and type II mechanisms. Our results have clearly indicated that tri-para-substituted triarylmethane dyes bind efficiently to albumin as monomers and dimers and, interestingly, that the formation of dye aggregates in aqueous solutions is actually assisted by the protein. Protein-assisted dye aggregation takes place under conditions of high biopolymer loading (high [dye]/[protein] ratios), as attested by the appearance of a hypsochromically shifted absorption band (H-band) that overlaps with the spectral shoulder of the respective dye monomer. As predicted by the molecular exciton theory, the intersystem crossing efficiency in H-type dimers is expected to be higher than in the respective dye monomers, and photoinduced electron transfer events are intrinsically favored in dye aggregates as a result of the physical contact between donor and acceptor. We have found that when triarylmethanes are noncovalently bound to BSA their photoreactivity undergoes a remarkable enhancement, and that the photooxidation mechanism type I is particularly favored in the macromolecular environment. A comparative examination of the behavior of triarylmethane dyes with that of methylene blue have shown that in the case of methylene blue the binding phenomenon also favor the type I mechanism. |
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