Fluorescence 'turn-off-on' assays for neomycin sulphate and K + ions with orange-red fluorescent molybdenum nanoclusters.
Vibhuti Atulbhai SadhuSanjay JhaTae Jung ParkSuresh Kumar KailasaPublished in: Luminescence : the journal of biological and chemical luminescence (2024)
Fluorescent metal nanoclusters (MNCs) have found extensive application in recognizing molecular species. Here, orange-red fluorescent Arg-A. paniculata-MoNCs were synthesized using Andrographis paniculata leaf extract, arginine as a ligand, and MoCl 5 as a metal precursor. The Arg-A. paniculata-MoNCs complex exhibited a quantum yield (QY) of 16.91% and excitation/emission wavelengths of 400/665 nm. The synthesized Arg-A. paniculata-MoNCs successfully acted as a probe for assaying neomycin sulphate (NS) via fluorescence turn-off and K + ions via fluorescence turn-on mechanisms, respectively. Moreover, the developed probe was effectively used to develop a cellulose paper strip-based sensor for detection of NS and K + ions. Arg-A. paniculata-MoNCs demonstrated great potential for sensing NS and K + ions, with concentration ranges of 0.1-80 and 0.25-110 μM for NS and K + ions, respectively. The as-synthesized Arg-A. paniculata-MoNCs efficiently detected NS and K + ions in food and biofluid samples, respectively.