4.8 Article

Light-on Sensing of Antioxidants Using Gold Nanoclusters

Journal

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 86, Issue 10, Pages 4989-4994

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ac500528m

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Funding

  1. King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST)

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Depletion of intracellular antioxidants is linked to major cytotoxic events and cellular disorders, such as oxidative stress and multiple sclerosis. In addition to medical diagnosis, determining the concentration of antioxidants in foodstuffs, food preservatives, and cosmetics has proved to be very vital. Gold nanoclusters (Au-NCs) have a core size below 2 nm and contain several metal atoms. They have interesting photophysical properties, are readily functionalized, and are safe to use in various biomedical applications. Herein, a simple and quantitative spectroscopic method based on Au-NCs is developed to detect and image antioxidants such as ascorbic acid. The sensing mechanism is based on the fact that antioxidants can protect the fluorescence of Au-NCs against quenching by highly reactive oxygen species. Our method shows great accuracy when employed to detect the total antioxidant capacity in commercial fruit juice. Moreover, confocal fluorescence microscopy images of He La cells show that this approach can be successfully used to image antioxidant levels in living cells. Finally, the potential application of this light-on detection method in multiple logic gate fabrication was discussed using the fluorescence intensity of Au-NCs as output.

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