The synthesis of four water-soluble mannose-tethering BODIPY-based photosensitizers (PSs) with varying substituents (-H, -OMe, -NO2 and -I) in the para-phenyl moiety attached to the meso-position of the BODIPY core, offering tumor-targeting and photodynamic therapeutic (PDT) potentials, is reported. The PDT capability of the synthesized PSs was investigated using the cervical cancer cell line HeLa. Owing to the heavy atom effect, BODIPY I, enhanced the intersystem crossing (ISC) to produce singlet oxygen (1O2) and maintained a high fluorescence quantum yield (ΦF) of 0.71. In contrast, the electron-donating methoxy substituent (BODIPY OMe) caused a notable perturbation in the occupied frontier molecular orbitals, subsequently achieving a higher 1O2 generation capability with a high ΦF of 0.85. Conversely, substitution with the electron-withdrawing nitro group (BODIPY NO2) resulted in a perturbation of unoccupied frontier molecular orbitals and generated a forbidden dark S1 state, negatively affecting both fluorescence and 1O2 generation efficiencies. The cytotoxicity of the synthesized water-soluble BODIPY PSs in the dark and under LED irradiation against the HeLa cell line was also assessed, with BODIPY I, OMe and H showing favorable PDT activity. Collectively, the performance of the mannose-conjugated BODIPY PSs in this study contributed promising results for the development of photodynamic therapeutic agents for cancer treatment.
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