4.7 Article

Development of a NIR fluorescent probe for highly selective and sensitive detection of cysteine in living cells and in vivo

Journal

TALANTA
Volume 234, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.talanta.2021.122685

Keywords

NIR specificity cysteine water-soluble bio-security dynamic visualization

Funding

  1. Key Laboratory Construction Project of Jilin Province [20190901002JC]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Jilin Province [20200201169JC]
  3. Innovation Building Projects of Jilin Province [2019C007]

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Cysteine plays vital roles in the human body, and detecting it with high selectivity and sensitivity in vivo is crucial. Near-infrared fluorescent probes are widely used in biological detection, but there are few probes that can detect Cys. By synthesizing a specific structure NIR probe, high selectivity detection of Cys can be achieved, showing excellent performance and promising applications.
Cysteine (Cys) plays important physiological roles in the human body, and abnormal Cys concentrations can cause a variety of diseases. Thus, detecting Cys with high selectivity and sensitivity in vivo is important. Nearinfrared (NIR) fluorescent probes are widely employed in biological detection because of their excellent optical properties such as minimal damage to biological samples, low background interference and high signal-to-noise ratio. However, few NIR fluorescent probes that can detect Cys over homocysteine (Hcy) and glutathione (GSH) have been reported because of their similar reactivity and structure. In this work, a highly water-soluble NIR probe (CYNA) for detecting Cys whose structure is similar to that of indocyanine green and is based on cyanine skeleton was synthesized and via aromatic nucleophilic substitution-rearrangement (SNAr-rearrangement) to specific recognize the cysteine. The probe showed high selectivity toward Cys and superior biosecurity, excellent biocompatibility and prolonged dynamic imaging. It also has long fluorescence emission wavelength (820 nm), low detection limit (14 nM) and was successfully applied for visualizing Cys in living cells and mice, which has great promise for applications in noninvasive vivo biological imaging and detection.

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