A pyrene-based ratiometric probe for nanomolar level detection of glyphosate in food and environmental samples and its application for live-cell imaging†
Abstract
A reversible chromogenic probe based on a pyrene-linked bispicolyl amphiphile has been utilized for ratiometric, nanomolar level (LOD: 1.3 nM) detection of glyphosate in Brij-58 micelle medium. The probe shows a change in solution color from greenish-yellow to colorless with Cu2+ ions along with fluorescence quenching. When the solution was subsequently exposed to glyphosate, a ratiometric color-change from colorless to greenish-yellow was noticed, in addition to a turn-on fluorescence (green) response. Mechanistic investigations indicate dissociation of the preformed metal complex (1·Cu2+) in the presence of glyphosate, which triggers the release of unbound probe in the reaction medium. When 1·Hg2+ was used as the recognition template instead of 1·Cu2+, no interaction was observed with glyphosate. Considering its high sensitivity, 1·Cu2+ was further utilized for screening of real-life samples, such as water, soil, crops and packaged food items. Finally, the present sensory system is utilized for fluorescence bioimaging of intracellular glyphosate.
 
                




 Please wait while we load your content...
                                            Please wait while we load your content...
                                        