Peptide-Conjugated Fluorescent Molecular Rotor for Subcellular Protein Detection

Abstract

Protein detection plays an important role in disease diagnosis and treatment. However, it faces limitations including insufficient sensitivity, complex operation procedure, and frequent labeling. These constraints hinder the reliable detection and dynamic monitoring of targeted protein. Fluorescent molecular rotors (FMRs) present a viable sensing alternative for protein detection. The peptide-conjugated FMRs employ functional peptides for specific recognition of targeted proteins and incorporate FMRs as signaling units. Upon binding to the targeted protein, the rotational freedom of the molecular rotor is restricted, leading to a marked increase in fluorescence intensity. Consequently, it significantly overcomes key limitations likes operational complexity, antibody dependence, and dynamic tracking. This review focuses on the design strategies of peptide-conjugated FMRs for protein detection. Their application and recent progress for quantifying expression levels, monitoring structural alterations, detecting intermolecular interactions of different proteins within organelles are also highlighted.

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Article information

Article type
Review Article
Submitted
13 Oct 2025
Accepted
09 Dec 2025
First published
10 Dec 2025

Nanoscale, 2025, Accepted Manuscript

Peptide-Conjugated Fluorescent Molecular Rotor for Subcellular Protein Detection

H. Fang, F. Wu, S. Hao, Q. Wang, Y. Cheng, F. Xia and X. Lou, Nanoscale, 2025, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D5NR04314J

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