Issue 30, 2018

Near-infrared and lysosome-targetable fluorescent probe based on phenoxazinium for hydrogen peroxide detection

Abstract

A new near-infrared and lysosome-targetable fluorescent probe based on phenoxazinium was designed and prepared for hydrogen peroxide detection. This probe used phenoxazinium as the fluorophore acceptor and a methyl(phenyl)sulfane unit as the recognition group through a photoinduced electron transfer mechanism. With the addition of H2O2, the methyl(phenyl)sulfane unit of the probe was oxidized to a sulfoxide unit, causing enhanced fluorescence intensity at 676 nm due to the inhibition of photoinduced electron transfer. This probe not only showed competitive sensitivity, good selectivity, and a relatively fast response time, but also selectively targeted lysosomes of HeLa cells, indicating that it could be applied to detecting and visualizing H2O2 in HeLa cell lysosomes.

Graphical abstract: Near-infrared and lysosome-targetable fluorescent probe based on phenoxazinium for hydrogen peroxide detection

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
25 Jun 2018
Accepted
12 Jul 2018
First published
12 Jul 2018

Anal. Methods, 2018,10, 3754-3758

Near-infrared and lysosome-targetable fluorescent probe based on phenoxazinium for hydrogen peroxide detection

Y. Chen, W. Zhu, X. Wei, Y. Xu, R. Sun and J. Ge, Anal. Methods, 2018, 10, 3754 DOI: 10.1039/C8AY01403E

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