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Hypochlorite‐Mediated Modulation of Photoinduced Electron Transfer in a Phenothiazine–Boron dipyrromethene Electron Donor–Acceptor Dyad: A Highly Water Soluble “Turn‐On” Fluorescent Probe for Hypochlorite

36

Citations

103

References

2018

Year

Abstract

A highly water-soluble phenothiazine (PTZ)-boron dipyrromethene (BODIPY)-based electron donor-acceptor dyad (WS-Probe), which contains BODIPY as the signaling antennae and PTZ as the OCl<sup>-</sup> reactive group, was designed and used as a fluorescent chemosensor for the detection of OCl<sup>-</sup> . Upon addition of incremental amounts of NaOCl, the quenched fluorescence of WS-Probe was enhanced drastically, which indicated the inhibition of reductive photoinduced electron transfer (PET) from PTZ to <sup>1</sup> BODIPY*; the detection limit was calculated to be 26.7 nm. Selectivity studies with various reactive oxygen species, cations, and anions revealed that WS-Probe was able to detect OCl<sup>-</sup> selectively. Steady-state fluorescence studies performed at varied pH suggested that WS-Probe can detect NaOCl and exhibits maximum fluorescence in the pH range of 7 to 8, similar to physiological conditions. ESI-MS analysis and <sup>1</sup> H NMR spectroscopy titrations showed the formation of sulfoxide as the major oxidized product upon addition of hypochlorite. More interestingly, when WS-Probe was treated with real water samples, the fluorescence response was clearly visible with tap water and disinfectant, which indicated the presence of OCl<sup>-</sup> in these samples. The in vitro cell viability assay performed with human embryonic kidney 293 (HEK 293) cells suggested that WS-probe is non-toxic up to 10 μm and implicates the use of the probe for biological applications.

References

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