Issue 34, 2024

Selectively lighting up glyoxal in living cells using an o-phenylenediamine fused hemicyanine

Abstract

Glyoxal (GL) is a reactive α-dicarbonyl compound generated from glycated proteins in the Maillard reaction. It has attracted particular attention over the past few years because of its possible clinical significance in chronic and age-related diseases. In this work, a reaction-based red emission fluorescent probe GL1 has been synthesized successfully by grafting an alkyl group onto an amino group to regulate its selectivity for GL. Under physiological conditions, the fluorescence intensity of GL1 at 640 nm obviously increased with the increase of GL concentration, and it exhibited high selectivity for GL over other reactive carbonyl compounds, as well as a lower detection limit (0.021 μM) and a larger Stokes shift (112 nm). At the same time, GL1 can selectively accumulate in mitochondria and can be used to detect exogenous and endogenous GL in living cells with low cytotoxicity.

Graphical abstract: Selectively lighting up glyoxal in living cells using an o-phenylenediamine fused hemicyanine

Supplementary files

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Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
20 Jul 2024
Accepted
01 Aug 2024
First published
07 Aug 2024

Org. Biomol. Chem., 2024,22, 6981-6987

Selectively lighting up glyoxal in living cells using an o-phenylenediamine fused hemicyanine

Z. Wang, C. Liu, H. Yao, S. He, L. Zhao and X. Zeng, Org. Biomol. Chem., 2024, 22, 6981 DOI: 10.1039/D4OB01195C

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