| Literature DB >> 27303785 |
Kai Sun1, Ying Tang1, Qiong Li1, Shengyan Yin1, Weiping Qin1, Jiangbo Yu2, Daniel T Chiu2, Yubin Liu3, Zhen Yuan3, Xuanjun Zhang3, Changfeng Wu1.
Abstract
Small molecules participate extensively in various life processes. However, specific and sensitive detection of small molecules in a living system is highly challenging. Here, we describe in vivo real-time dynamic monitoring of small molecules by a luminescent polymer-dot oxygen transducer. The optical transducer combined with an oxygen-consuming enzyme can sensitively detect small-molecule substrates as the enzyme-catalyzed reaction depletes its internal oxygen reservoir in the presence of small molecules. We exemplify this detection strategy by using glucose-oxidase-functionalized polymer dots, yielding high selectivity, large dynamic range, and reversible glucose detection in cell and tissue environments. The transducer-enzyme assembly after subcutaneous implantation provides a strong luminescence signal that is transdermally detectable and continuously responsive to blood glucose fluctuations for up to 30 days. In view of a large library of oxygen-consuming enzymes, this strategy is promising for in vivo detection and quantitative determination of a variety of small molecules.Entities:
Keywords: dynamic monitoring; fluorescent nanoparticle; in vivo imaging; semiconductor polymer dots; small molecule
Year: 2016 PMID: 27303785 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.6b02386
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881