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Detection of tiopronin in body fluids and pharmaceutical products using red-emissive DNA-stabilized silver nanoclusters as a fluorescent probe.

Pu ZhangChunyan JiaYannan ZhaoHonghong LuoXin TanXiaohong MaYi Wang
Published in: Mikrochimica acta (2019)
Tiopronin is a widely used drug for treatment of cystinuria, rheumatoid arthritis and hepatic disorders. It is also an antidote to heavy metal poisoning and a radioprotective agent. A method is described for rapid and sensitive determination of tiopronin using DNA-stabilized silver nanoclusters (DNA-AgNCs) as a fluorescent probe. Tiopronin can selectively bind to DNA-AgNCs to form a stable Ag-S bond upon which the red photoluminescence (best measured at excitation/emission wavelengths of 590/640 nm) is quenched. The finding is used to design an assay that has a linear response in the 1-150 nM tiopronin concentration range and a 270 pM limit of detection. Compared with previously reported methods, the present approach is more rapid, highly sensitive and selective. It has been successfully applied in the detection of tiopronin in spiked urine and serum, and in pharmaceutical products (tablets and injections). Graphical abstract An ultrasensitive and reliable method for tiopronin assay is developed using red-emissive silver nanoclusters as a fluorescent probe. It has been successfully applied in the determination of tiopronin in biological fluids and pharmaceutical products.
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