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Self-Cascade Nanoenzyme of Cupric Oxide Nanoparticles (CuO NPs) Induced in Situ Catalysis Formation of Polyelectrolyte as Template for the Synthesis of Near-Infrared Fluorescent Silver Nanoclusters and the Application in Glutathione Detection and Bioimaging.

Yaxin XuJun YanYu ZhuHaoyu ChenCuiyan WuXiaohua ZhuYouyu ZhangHaitao LiMeiling LiuShouzhuo Yao
Published in: Analytical chemistry (2022)
In this work, near-infrared fluorescent silver nanoclusters (Ag NCs) were prepared based on the in situ formed poly methacrylic acid (PMAA) as the template and stabilizer, which is synthesized by methacrylic acid (MAA) and hydroxyl radical (·OH) that is generated by the cascade nanoenzyme reaction of cupric oxide nanoparticles (CuO NPs). CuO NPs possess the intrinsic glutathione-like (GPx-like) and peroxidase-like (POD-like) activities, which can catalyze glutathione (GSH) and O 2 to produce hydrogen peroxide (H 2 O 2 ), and then transform into ·OH. The fluorescence intensity of Ag NCs decreases with the addition of GSH, because the -SH can easily anchor on the surface, resulting in the PMAA leaving the Ag NCs, and the coeffect of GSH and PMAA results in the aggregation to form larger Ag NPs. A good linear relationship between the fluorescence quenching rate and the GSH concentration was found in the range 0.01-40 μM with the detection limit 8.0 nM. The Ag NCs can be applied in the detection of GSH in the serum, as well as bioimaging of endogenous and exogenous GSH in cells with high sensitivity. Moreover, the normal and cancer cells can be distinguished through bioimaging because of the different GSH levels. The new method for the preparation of biocompatible nanoprobe based on the nanozyme tandem catalysis and the in situ formed template can avoid the direct usage of polymers or protein templates that hinder preparation and separation, providing a reliable approach for the synthesis, biosensing, and bioimaging of nanoclusters.
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