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Discriminative Fluorescence Sensing of Biothiols in Vitro and in Living Cells
124
Citations
29
References
2015
Year
EngineeringPeptide ScienceSimultaneous Discriminative SensingGood SelectivityDiscriminative Fluorescence SensingBiosensing SystemsBioanalysisBioimagingNanosensorAnion SensingCation SensingChemical SensorMolecular ImagingBiophysicsLiving CellsBiochemistryHigh SensitivityMolecular ModelingSingle-molecule DetectionBiomolecular EngineeringBiomedical DiagnosticsChemical ProbeMedicineSmall Molecules
Simultaneous discriminative sensing of biothiols in vitro and in living cells has remained challenging. Herein, we report a new sulfonamide-based self-quenched fluorescent probe 1 for this purpose with high sensitivity and good selectivity. Treatment of 1 with cysteine (Cys), homocysteine (Hcy), or glutathione (GSH) yields aminoluciferin, 2-cyano-6-aminobenzothiazole homocysteine (CBTHcy), or 2-cyano-6-aminobenzothiazole (CBT), turning "on" the fluorescence at wavelengths of 522, 517, or 490 nm, respectively. Kinetic study indicated that 1 reacts with Cys faster than with Hcy or GSH. With these unique properties of 1, we applied 1 for highly sensitive sensing of Cys, Hcy, and GSH among other 19 natural amino acids (AAs) with good selectivity. Confocal fluorescence microscopic imaging of 1-treated HepG2 cells at two channels (522 ± 8 and 490 ± 8 nm), together with quantitative analysis, indicated that the "turn-on" fluorescence was induced by intracellular Cys-dominating condensation and reduction of 1 but not by intracellular GSH-dominating reduction of 1. This suggests that 1 could be applied for discriminative sensing of intracellular Cys from the abundant GSH. Further development of 1 might bring about an efficient tool for probing cellular functions that relate to biothiols.
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