Monochromophore-Based Phosphorescence and Fluorescence from Pure Organic Assemblies for Ratiometric Hypoxia Detection.
Xiao-Qin LiuKe ZhangJian-Feng GaoYu-Zhe ChenChen-Ho TungLi-Zhu WuPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2020)
Hypoxia is a parameter related to many diseases. Ratiometric hypoxia probes often rely on a combination of an O2 -insensitive fluorophore and an O2 -sensitive phosphor in a polymer matrix, which require high cost and multi-step synthesis of transition metal complexes. The two-chromophore hypoxia probes encounter unfavorable energy transfer processes and different stabilities of the chromophores. Reported herein is a pure organic ratiometric hypoxia nanoprobe, assembled by a monochromophore, naphthalimide ureidopyrimidinone (BrNpA-UPy), bridged by a bis-UPy-functionalized benzyl skeleton. The joint factors of quadruple hydrogen bonding, the rigid backbone of UPy, and bromine substitution of the naphthalimide derivative facilitate bright phosphorescence (ΦP =7.7 %, τP =3.2 ms) and fluorescence of the resultant nanoparticles (SNPs) at room temperature, which enable accurate, ratiometric, sensitive oxygen detection (Ksv =189.6 kPa-1 ) in aqueous solution as well as in living HeLa cells.
Keyphrases
- energy transfer
- fluorescent probe
- living cells
- room temperature
- quantum dots
- endothelial cells
- single molecule
- ionic liquid
- sensitive detection
- aqueous solution
- small molecule
- transition metal
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- induced apoptosis
- mass spectrometry
- nitric oxide
- genome wide
- high resolution
- real time pcr
- cell proliferation
- oxidative stress
- water soluble
- dna methylation
- molecularly imprinted