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Review
. 2025 May 19;26(10):4871.
doi: 10.3390/ijms26104871.

Bioimaging and Sensing Properties of Curcumin and Derivatives

Affiliations
Review

Bioimaging and Sensing Properties of Curcumin and Derivatives

Chiara Maria Antonietta Gangemi et al. Int J Mol Sci. .

Abstract

Curcumin (Cur) is one of the most studied natural polyphenolic compounds, with many pharmacological properties and a luminescent skeleton. Natural fluorescent molecules are peculiar tools in nanomedicine for bioimaging and sensing, and this review focuses on the photophysical properties and applications of Cur in these biomedical fields. The first part of the review opens with a description of the Cur chemical skeleton and its connection with the luminescent nature of this molecule. The 1,6-heptadiene-3,5-dionyl chain causes the involvement of Cur in a keto-enol tautomerism, which influences its solvatochromism. The polyphenolic nature of its skeleton justifies the Cur generation of singlet oxygen and ROS upon photoexcitation, and this is responsible for the photophysical processes that may be related to the photodynamic therapy (PDT) effects of Cur. In the second part of the review, bioimaging based on Cur derivatives is reviewed, with a deeper attention paid to the molecular diagnostic and nano-formulations in which Cur is involved, either as a drug or a source of fluorescence. Theragnostics is an innovative idea in medicine based on the integration of diagnosis and therapy with nanotechnology. The combination of diagnostics and therapy provides optimal and targeted treatment of the disease from its early stages. Curcumin has been involved in a series of nano-formulations exploiting its pharmacological and photophysical characteristics and overcoming its strong lipophilicity using biocompatible nanomaterials. In the third part of the review, modifications of the Cur skeleton were employed to synthesize probes that change their color in response to specific stimuli as a consequence of the trapping of specific molecules. Finally, the methodologies of sensing biothiols, anions, and cations by Cur are described, and the common features of such luminescent probes reveal how each modification of the skeleton can deeply influence its natural luminescence.

Keywords: bioimaging; curcumin; luminescence; nano-formulation; sensing; theragnostics.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
The enol (a) and keto (b) forms of curcumin. Minimized structures in frontal and lateral views of of enol form (c) and keto form (d).
Figure 2
Figure 2
Products of “in-solution” and photodegradation of curcumin.
Figure 3
Figure 3
Nanocarriers hosting curcumin in their insides.
Figure 4
Figure 4
Coating of curcumin with acrylic resins. (a) Cur-NPs composed of Pluronic F127 and H-[P(OEGMA-co—LMA; (b) Cur-NPs with carborane coated on RL-100 and RS-100 resins; (c) Cur-PLGA- NPs; (d) Cur and paclitaxel PLA-TPGS micelles; (e) Cur-polyethylene glycol based “curcumisome”.
Figure 5
Figure 5
Nano-formulations of curcumin based on carbon dots. (a) Cur-CD from PET syrup bottle; (b) Andrographis paniculata and curcumin CDs; (c) Citric acid-Cur-natural red CDs; (d) Cur-CDs from turmeric extract.
Figure 6
Figure 6
Metal–curcumin complexes and their applications in bioimaging. (a) ML2-Cur and its inclusion complexes with α-CDs; (b) ML2-Cur on acrylic resins and ML2-Cur β-CDs inclusion complexes on acrylic resins.
Figure 7
Figure 7
Bichromophoric system CB-green in MCM-41 mesoporous nanoparticles.
Figure 8
Figure 8
(a) Bichromophoric system CURBO in halloysite mesoporous NPs; (b) Curcumin-halloysite nanotubes system.
Figure 9
Figure 9
Luminescent AD sensors of CRANAD family. (a) CRANAD, (b) MyL-1-2.
Figure 10
Figure 10
Cu2+ sensing mechanism of 2-picolinyl BF2-Cur complex.
Figure 11
Figure 11
Curcumin-based sensors for biothiols. (a) Cur-derived sulfenic acid for Cy sensing; (b) 2,4-dinitrobenzene sulfonyl-Cur derivative for biothiols sensing; Cur-acrylate derivative for Cys sensing in vitro (c) and in vivo (d).
Figure 12
Figure 12
Lysosome-targeting Cur-based probe KSLP1 and its sensing mechanism.

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