Publication | Closed Access
Thin PEGylated Carbon Nitrides: Water‐Dispersible Organic Nanodots as Bioimaging Probes
40
Citations
28
References
2017
Year
Fluorescent materials are being used for the optical/fluorescence imaging of living cells and animal models. As such, the development of heavy-metal-free, water-dispersible, and biocompatible imaging probes is still important. Carbon nitride (C<sub>3</sub> N<sub>4</sub> ) is used as a bioimaging probe due to its suitable optical properties, thus enhancing its biocompatibility and dispersibility in aqueous media is required. In this study, we incorporated short-chain polyethylene glycol (PEG) groups onto a carbon nitride network by the simple N-alkylation of hexaethylene glycolic mesylate with nucleophilic nitrogen atoms on oxidized carbon nitride (OCN). The PEGylated OCN (PEG-OCN) was well dispersed in water as nanodots with a lateral dimension of approximately 30 nm and a thickness of 0.5-1.2 nm and showed strong photoluminescence in the visible region. Cell-viability testing confirmed that these "heavy-metal-free" organic nanodots were highly biocompatible and noncytotoxic. In particular, the developed nanodots could provide clear confocal images of RAW 264.7 cells without weakening cell activity and displaying any aggregation in a range of concentrations (25-100 μg mL<sup>-1</sup> ) with bright-green emission in the cytoplasm.
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