Abstract

The design and development of optical probes for sensing neurotoxic amyloid fibrils are active and important areas of research and are undergoing continuous advancements. In this paper, we have synthesized a red emissive styryl chromone-based fluorophore (SC1) for fluorescence-based detection of amyloid fibrils. SC1 records exceptional modulation in its photophysical properties in the presence of amyloid fibrils, which has been attributed to the extreme sensitivity of its photophysical properties toward the immediate microenvironment of the probe in the fibrillar matrix. SC1 also shows very high selectivity toward the amyloid-aggregated form of the protein as compared to its native form. The probe is also able to monitor the kinetic progression of the fibrillation process, with comparable efficiency as that of the most popular amyloid probe, Thioflavin-T. Moreover, the performance of SC1 is least sensitive to the ionic strength of the medium, which is an advantage over Thioflavin-T. In addition, the molecular level interaction forces between the probe and the fibrillar matrix have been interrogated by molecular docking calculations which suggest the binding of the probe to the exterior channel of the fibrils. The probe has also been demonstrated to sense protein aggregates from the Aβ-40 protein, which is known to be responsible for Alzheimer's disease. Moreover, SC1 exhibited excellent biocompatibility and exclusive accumulation at mitochondria which allowed us to successfully demonstrate the applicability of this probe to detect mitochondrial-aggregated protein induced by an oxidative stress indicator molecule 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal (4-HNE) in A549 cell lines as well as in a simple animal model like Caenorhabditis elegans. Overall, the styryl chromone-based probe presents a potentially exciting alternative for the sensing of neurotoxic protein aggregation species both in vitro as well as in vivo.

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