Amphiphilic Au Nanoclusters Modulated by Magnetic Gemini Surfactants as a Cysteine Chemosensor and an MRI Contrast Agent.
Mengjiao YiLin MaWenrong ZhaoJie ZhaoQi FanJingcheng HaoPublished in: Langmuir : the ACS journal of surfaces and colloids (2021)
Cationic magnetic Gemini surfactants (mag-G-surfs), [C14H29(CH3)2N(CH2)2N(CH3)2C14H29]2+·2[XCl3Br]- (14-2-14·2X, X = Ce, Gd, or Ho), efficiently induce the aggregation of glutathione-protected Au nanoclusters (NCs) (GSH-Au NCs). These magnetic luminescent aggregates not only possess aggregation-induced emission (AIE) behavior but also display aggregation-induced magnetic enhancement. In particular, 14-2-14·2Ce and 14-2-14·2Gd have a better effect on boosting the luminescence intensity, quantum yield (QY), and luminescence lifetime (τ). The luminescent aggregates of GSH-Au NCs triggered by 14-2-14·2Gd or 14-2-14·2Ho exhibit more favorable paramagnetic behavior. Other Au NCs containing a Au(I)-thiolate complex shell also exhibit the obvious AIE phenomenon after introducing 14-2-14·2Gd, demonstrating the luminescence enhancement effect of mag-G-surfs. The luminescent aggregate 14-2-14·2Ce@GSH-Au NCs can serve as a "light up" fluorometric probe to detect cysteine selectively with the detection limit (DL) of 36 μM, and the magnetic luminescent aggregate 14-2-14·2Gd@GSH-Au NCs has the potential to be a novel contrast agent in T1-weighted magnetic resonance (MR) imaging due to its satisfactory contrasting ability.
Keyphrases
- sensitive detection
- quantum dots
- energy transfer
- fluorescent probe
- magnetic resonance
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- living cells
- contrast enhanced
- molecularly imprinted
- reduced graphene oxide
- magnetic resonance imaging
- computed tomography
- gold nanoparticles
- mass spectrometry
- molecular dynamics
- light emitting
- human health
- high intensity
- visible light