A visual ratiometric fluorescence sensor for glutathione response based on MnO 2 nanowires as an oxidant, quencher and recognition unit.
Yu FanXin WangHe HuangYumeng YangJin-Lin GuoShajie LuoMeilian ZhaoYang LiPublished in: Analytical methods : advancing methods and applications (2023)
As the "mother of antioxidants", glutathione (GSH) plays an important role in physiological functions. Rapid and accurate monitoring of GSH is of great significance for medicinal chemistry, food chemistry, and clinical medicine. We herein report a visual ratiometric fluorescence sensor based on MnO 2 nanowires (MnO 2 NWs) as an oxidant, quencher and recognition unit for the determination of GSH. The powerful ratiometric fluorescent probe was constructed by mixing thiamine (VB 1 ) and rhodamine B (RhB) with the help of MnO 2 NWs. MnO 2 NWs could not only effectively quench the fluorescence of RhB due to the inner filter effect (IFE), but also oxidized non-fluorescent VB 1 to blue fluorescent thiochrome (oxVB 1 ). Upon interaction with GSH, the quenched RhB fluorescence could be rapidly restored through decomposition of MnO 2 NWs into Mn 2+ , while the oxVB 1 fluorescence decreased, showing an apparent color change from blue to red. The concentration of GSH was proportional to the ratio of fluorescence intensities of RhB and oxVB 1 , and the detection linear range was 1 to 10 000 μM with comparable selectivity. This ratio fluorescence sensor was successfully applied to GSH determination in whitening capsules and glutathione tablets with satisfactory results, and the sensor may be a potentially powerful tool for the detection of GSH.