| Literature DB >> 27864700 |
Lijun Xu1, Yang Chen1,2, Ruihua Zhang1,2, Tian Gao1, Yajie Zhang1, Xiaoqiang Shen1, Renjun Pei3.
Abstract
A G-quadruplex-based fluorescent biosensor for highly sensitive detection of barium ion (Ba2+) was constructed for the first time. In the absence of Ba2+, the G-quadruplex-specific fluorescence ligand N-methyl mesoporphyrin IX (NMM) remained weakly fluorescent when coexisted with a single-stranded G-quadruplex sequence AGRO100. Upon addition of Ba2+, AGRO100 was folded into G-quadruplex structures with the aid of Ba2+, which bound with NMM by stacking forces and significantly enhanced its fluorescence. The maximum fluorescence intensity of NMM was increased by ca. 22-fold in response to 1 μM Ba2+. This simple method exhibites a good linear relationship in the range of 0-600 nM with the detection limit of 4 nM. The detection method is turn-on, fast, economic, high in signal-to-noise ratio and free of participation of toxic organic solvents, demonstrating its great potential for on-site and real-time Ba2+ detection.Entities:
Keywords: Barium; Fluorescence; G-quadruplexes; Label-free; Sensors
Year: 2016 PMID: 27864700 DOI: 10.1007/s10895-016-1984-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Fluoresc ISSN: 1053-0509 Impact factor: 2.217