A turn-on bis-BODIPY chemosensor for copper recognition based on the in situ generation of a benzimidazole-triazole receptor and its applications in bioimaging

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

Abstract

A highly sensitive and selective off-on bis-BODIPY fluorescent sensor, BODIPY-NN, could be used to detect Cu2+ ions in aqueous solutions and to image intracellular Cu2+ ions in living cells. Upon addition of Cu2+ ions, BODIPY-NN showed a turn-on fluorescence response with 4-fold enhancement at 529 nm, indicating the inhibition of photo-induced electron transfer (PET) from the phenylenediamine-triazole unit to the BODIPY skeleton. This was triggered by oxidative C-N cyclization of phenylenediamine-triazole to in situ form a benzimidazole-triazole receptor providing an appropriate coordination environment that enhances metal ion binding efficiency. A mechanistic study revealed that Cu2+ acts as both a catalyst for oxidative C-N cyclization and a coordination center. The detection limit was determined to be 85 nM. Importantly, BODIPY-NN has been successfully utilized for fluorescence imaging of Cu2+ ions in MCF-7 cells and showed no toxicity toward MCF-7 cells. The non-cytotoxic nature and high sensitivity of BODIPY-NN pave a way for its use in in vivo studies as a promising fluorescent probe for high-performance sensing and bioimaging.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)22525-22532
Number of pages8
JournalNew journal of chemistry
Volume46
Issue number47
Publication statusPublished - 22 Nov 2022
Peer-reviewedYes

External IDs

ORCID /0000-0001-7323-7816/work/163295523

Keywords