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. 2012 Apr 10;3:120. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2012.00120

Figure 2.

Figure 2

Representative chemical structures of PS that have been reported to be especially active in the photoinactivation of fungal cells. (A) Methylene blue, MB, (B), new methylene blue, NMB (Dai et al., 2011a); (C), selenium Nile blue analog, EtNBSe (Foley et al., 2006); (D), malachite green oxalate, (E), bis-amino-substituted bacteriochlorin, BC29 (Huang et al., 2010a); (F), tris-N-methyl-pyrrolidinium fullerene, BB6 (Tegos et al., 2005); (G), hexakis-cationic fullerene BB24 (Huang et al., 2010b); (H). Conjugate between polyethylenimine and chlorine (e6), PEI-ce6 (Tegos et al., 2006); (I), BF2 Chelate of N-(4-(4-Bromo-2-(4-bromo-3-(4-((diethyl(methyl)-ammonio)methyl)phenyl)-5-(4-methoxyphenyl)-1H-pyrrol-2-ylimino)-5-(4-methoxyphenyl)-2H-pyrrol-3-yl)benzyl)-N-ethyl-N-methylethanaminium iodide (Frimannsson et al., 2010); (J), 1,3-bis(dimethylamino)-2-propoxy-methoxy silicon phthalocyanine, BAM-SiPc (So et al., 2010).