Abstract: | The tumor-localizing photosensitizer hematoporphyrin derivative (HPD) is shown to undergo a simultaneous two-photon excitation into the near-ultraviolet Soret band system upon intense laser irradiation at 750 nm, a spectral region where there is no significant HPD one-photon absorbance in aqueous solution. Subsequent to this excitation, internal conversion and vibrational relaxation occur, resulting in the population of the vibrationless level of the first electronically excited singlet state. This state relaxes by two channels, the emission of fluorescence in the spectral region 600-700 nm and intersystem crossing into the triplet manifold, followed by near-resonant electronic energy transfer with surrounding oxygen to result in the generation of highly reactive singlet molecular oxygen (1 delta g). Evidence for the two-photon excitation consists in the observation both of the HPD fluorescence spectrum in the region of 615 nm as a result of 750 nm excitation and the quadratic dependence of this fluorescence emission intensity upon the excitation laser intensity. Since, in general, the penetration depth of ultraviolet and visible light into tissue varies directly with wavelength (red penetrating more deeply than blue), these studies suggest the possibility that two-photon-induced localization of tumor-bound HPD might facilitate the detection of deeper lying tumors than allowed by the current one-photon photolocalization method. |