4.4 Article

A New Fluorescent PET Probe for Hydrogen Peroxide and its Use in Enzymatic Assays for L-Lactate and D-Glucose

Journal

CHEMBIOCHEM
Volume 12, Issue 18, Pages 2779-2785

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/cbic.201100561

Keywords

fluorescence; glucose; hydrogen peroxide; lactate; oxidation; photoinduced electron transfer

Funding

  1. BMBF (German Ministry for Education and Research)
  2. German-Egyptian Research Fund [EGY 08/004]

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We present a new probe for the determination of hydrogen peroxide (HP). It is based on the yellow fluorophore 4-amino-1,8-napththalimide, coupled to p-anisidine (as a redox-active group) to form a probe that is based on photoinduced electron transfer (PET). The preparation of the probe (which we refer to as HP Green) was accomplished in four steps with good yield. Its fluorescence is independent of pH in the physiological range and quenched by a PET process that occurs between the p-anisidine redox moiety and the naphthalimide luminophore. If the p-anisidine group is oxidized by HP, PET is suppressed and fluorescence intensity is strongly increased. Addition of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) enhances the oxidation of HP Green and further improves the detection limit of HP. The use of HRP and HP Green enables the determination of HP concentration in a range of 0.1 to 5 mu M, with a limit of detection (LOD) as low as 64 nM (16 pmol per well in microtiter plates). HP Green and HRP also enable sensitive enzymatic assays of oxidase substrates in a kinetic format, as shown for L-lactate and D-glucose. L-Lactate concentration can be rapidly determined between 0.5 and 10 mu M after 6 minutes of incubation at 30 degrees C, with an LOD of 164 nm (41 pmol per well). This LOD is more than sixfold lower than that of the best commercial assays for lactate. The detection range for D-glucose is 2 to 30 mu M, and the LOD is 644 nM (161 pmol per well). These are among the lowest concentrations detectable for oxidase-based assays. The hexanoic acid moiety in HP Green may be further used to immobilize the probe in order to obtain sensor layers for continuous assays.

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