Stabilization of the ring-opened Rhodamine probe via multinoncovalent interactions for dual-mode detection of nitazenes

Abstract

Nitazene opioids, representing a potent class of emerging synthetic substances, have emerged as a significant threat to public health and biosafety worldwide. However, due to their chemical inertness and structural diversity, the conventional sensing mechanisms are still challengeable for the sensitive and on-site detection. Herein, we report Rhodamine B hydrazide (RhB-I), a probe which could be engineered to stabilize in its ring-opened form through multi-noncovalent interactions with nitazenes, enabling sensitive colorimetric-fluorescent dual-mode detection. The RhB-I probe exhibited superior detection performance, including a desirable limit of detection (LOD, 2.5 μg/mL), a rapid response (4 s), robust anti-interference capability against 22 potential interfering substances, and successful extension to detect eight additional nitazene derivatives. Notably, the RhB-I-based sensing platform enables accurate nitazene detection in biological matrices including saliva, hair, blood and urine, with saliva and urine requiring no pretreatment, as well as in e-cigarette oil and authentic specimen (tobacco). This work overturns the traditional paradigm that Rhodamine probes rely on analyte chemical reactivity, providing a novel strategy for detecting chemically inert small molecules and expanding the application scope of Rhodaminebased sensing.

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
10 Mar 2026
Accepted
11 May 2026
First published
14 May 2026

Anal. Methods, 2026, Accepted Manuscript

Stabilization of the ring-opened Rhodamine probe via multinoncovalent interactions for dual-mode detection of nitazenes

Y. Feng, Y. Li, B. Zhao, C. Zhao, J. Li, L. Yang, B. Zu and X. Dou, Anal. Methods, 2026, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D6AY00429F

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