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Design of a Practical Fluorescent Probe for Superoxide Based on Protection–Deprotection Chemistry of Fluoresceins with Benzenesulfonyl Protecting Groups
83
Citations
39
References
2006
Year
Bioorganic ChemistryProtection–deprotection ChemistryChemistryReagentChemical BiologyRedox BiologyBioanalysisAnalytical ChemistryChemical SensorMolecular ImagingA. BessoBiochemistryPrototype Probe 6Fluorous SynthesisSingle-molecule DetectionNatural SciencesPractical Fluorescent ProbePractical SuperoxideChemical ProbeMedicine
A strategy for designing probes based on protection-deprotection chemistry involving fluoresceins and their benzenesulfonyl (BES) derivatives has led to the development of a much more practical superoxide (O(2) (-.)) probe than the previously reported bis(2,4-dinitro-BES) tetrafluorofluorescein (6 a). Examination of various BES derivatives, developed from the starting point of the prototype probe 6 a, yielded 4,5-dimethoxy-2-nitro-BES tetrafluorofluorescein (BESSo; 7 j) as the optimal reagent. A microtiter plate assay with BESSo showed a tenfold improved detection limit for O(2) (-.) compared with such an assay based on 6 a. BESSo showed markedly better specificity for O(2) (-.) than for GSH or other reactive oxygen species, and this specificity was significantly higher than that of Fe(2+) and some reducing enzymes. These features have resulted in the development of an assay based on BESSo that is capable of providing more unambiguous results for O(2) (-.) release from neutrophils, with or without stimulation by phorbol myristate acetate, as compared with an assay based on 6 a. Intracellular generation of O(2) (-.) in human Jurkat T cells stimulated by butyric acid has been measured by using flow cytometry and fluorescence microscopy utilizing the acetoxymethyl derivative of BESSo.
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