| Literature DB >> 29321505 |
Md Mhahabubur Rhaman1, Mohammad H Hasan2, Azmain Alamgir1, Lihua Xu3, Douglas R Powell4, Bryan M Wong5, Ritesh Tandon6, Md Alamgir Hossain7.
Abstract
The selective detection of citrate anions is essential for various biological functions in living systems. A quantitative assessment ofEntities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29321505 PMCID: PMC5762659 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-18322-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Macrocycle L and its dinuclear copper complex 1.
Figure 2(a) Side view of the [Cu2 II(L)Cl4] motif in the crystal structure of [Cu2 II(L)Cl3]n∙nCl∙xH2O: Hydrogen atoms are not shown for clarity. (b) Crystal packing as viewed along the a-axis.
Figure 3The quenching of fluorescence intensity of EY upon the gradual addition of 1 in water at pH 7.0 [λex = 470 nm, λem = 536 nm]. The inset shows the titration plot of I/I 0 against [1]0/[EY]0 at λem = 536 nm.
Figure 4The change in fluorescence intensity of 1·EY (1/EY = 5:1) upon addition of 5 equiv. anions in water at pH 7.0 [λex = 470 nm, λem = 536 nm].
Figure 5The enhancement of fluorescence intensity of [1·EY] (1/EY = 5:1, [EY]0 = 2.0 × 10−6 M) upon the addition of citrate in water at pH 7.0 [λex = 470 nm, λem = 536 nm]. The inset shows the titration plot of I/I 0 against [citrate]0/[1·EY]0 at λem = 536 nm.
Conditional constants (K) for various anions for the equilibria: 1·EY + Anion = 1·Anion + EY, as measured by the indicator displacement assay in water at pH 7.0.
| Anion |
|
|---|---|
| Citrate | 6.5 × 105 |
| Oxalate | 1.9 × 105 |
| Glutamate | 1.0 × 105 |
| Phosphate | 3.9 × 104 |
| Adipate | 1.6 × 104 |
| Tartrate | 7.9 × 103 |
| Acetate | 1.9 × 103 |
| Benzoate | 3.9 × 102 |
aEstimated deviations are less than 15% (based on the standard deviation from the fit of experimental values).
Figure 6Determination of the detection limit for citrate: (a) The enhancement of fluorescence intensity of [1·EY] (1/EY = 5:1, [EY]0 = 2.0 × 10−6 M) upon the addition of citrate in the range of 1.25 × 10−6 to 8.60 × 10−6 M−1; (b) Citrate detection scale as plotted with I/I against the concentration of citrate [λex = 470 nm, λem = 536 nm].
Figure 7Colorimetric detection of citrate against various anions with 1·EY (1/EY = 5:1, [EY]0 = 2 × 10−5 M) in water at pH 7.0. Top: visible light; Bottom: UV light at 365 nm. 10 equiv. of anion were added to the solution of 1·EY.
Figure 8Progressive color change with an increasing amount of citrate in the range of 0 to 20 μmol to [1·EY] (1/EY = 5:1, [EY]0 = 4 × 10−6 M) in water at pH 7.0 under UV light at 365 nm.
Figure 9Viability of HF cells upon the treatment with 1·EY. HF cells were mock treated (control) or treated with 1·EY (0.1–500 µM) for 72 hours and cell viability was quantified using trypan blue exclusion assay. Error bars represent standard error of the mean from three independent experiments.
Figure 10Bright-field images of HF cells upon the treatment with 1·EY. HF cells were mock treated (control) or treated with 1·EY (0.1–500 µM) for 72 hours and live cell images were captured.
Figure 11DFT-optimized geometries for two different binding configurations (represented by the chemical structures), denoted as mode A (left) and mode B (right), of the citrate complex with [Cu2 II(L)Cl2]2+ carried out at the M06L/6-31 g(d,p) level of theory.