Frontiers in Nutrition (Jun 2022)

A Highly Sensitive and Selective Fluorescein-Based Cu2+ Probe and Its Bioimaging in Cell

  • Xin Leng,
  • Xin Leng,
  • Xin Leng,
  • Xin Leng,
  • Mengyao She,
  • Mengyao She,
  • Mengyao She,
  • Xilang Jin,
  • Jiao Chen,
  • Jiao Chen,
  • Jiao Chen,
  • Xuehao Ma,
  • Fulin Chen,
  • Fulin Chen,
  • Fulin Chen,
  • Jianli Li,
  • Bingqin Yang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnut.2022.932826
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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Copper is a vital trace metal in human body, which plays the significant roles in amounts of physiological and pathological processes. The application of copper-selective probe has attracted great interests from environmental tests to life process research, yet a few of sensitive Cu2+ tests based on on-site analysis have been reported. In this paper, a novel fluorescein-based fluorescent probe N4 was designed, synthesized, and characterized, which exhibited high selectivity and sensitivity to Cu2+ comparing with other metal ions in ethanol–water (1/1, v/v) solution. The probe N4 bonded with Cu2+ to facilitate the ring-opening, and an obvious new band at 525 nm in the fluorescence spectroscopy appeared, which could be used for naked-eye detection of Cu2+ within a broad pH range of 6–9. Meanwhile, a good linearity between the fluorescence intensity and the concentrations of Cu2+ ranged 0.1–1.5 eq. was observed, and the limit of detection of N4 to Cu2+ was calculated to be as low as 1.20 μm. In addition, the interaction mode between N4 and Cu2+ was found to be 1:1 by the Job's plot and mass experiment. Biological experiments showed that the probe N4 exhibited low biological toxicity and could be applied for Cu2+ imaging in living cells. The significant color shift associated with the production of the N4-Cu2+ complex at low micromolar concentrations under UV light endows N4 with a promising probe for field testing of trace Cu2+ ions.

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