| Literature DB >> 29363946 |
Chuan Fan1, Xiaoxia Lv1, Fengjuan Liu1, Luping Feng1, Min Liu1, Yuanyuan Cai1, Huan Liu1, Jingyi Wang1, Yanli Yang1, Hua Wang1.
Abstract
Silver nanoclusters (AgNCs) were first coated with bovine serum albumin (BSA) and then encapsulated into porous metal-organic frameworks of ZIF-8 by the protein-mediated biomineralization process. Unexpectedly, the fluorescence intensities of the yielded AgNCs-BSA@ZIF-8 nanocomposites were discovered to be continuously enhanced during each of the BSA coating and ZIF-8 encapsulation steps. Compared to common AgNCs, greatly improved photostability and storage stability of AgNCs could also be expected. More importantly, having benefited from the ZIF-8 shells, the prepared nanocomposites could possess the specific accumulation and sensitive response to Cu2+ ions, resulting in the rational quenching of their fluorescence intensities. Moreover, AgNCs-BSA@ZIF-8 nanocomposites were coated onto the hydrophobic arraying slides toward a microdots array-based fluorimetric method for the fast and sensitive evaluation of Cu2+ ions. It was discovered that the developed fluorimetric strategy could ensure the high-throughput analysis of Cu2+ ions in wide pH range, and especially some harsh and high-salt media. It can allow for the detection of Cu2+ ions in blood with the concentrations ranging from 4.0 × 10-4 to 160 μM, thus serving as a new copper detection candidate to be widely applied in clinical test, food safety, and environmental monitoring fields.Entities:
Keywords: biological mineralization; copper; fluorimetric analysis; metal−organic frameworks; silver nanoclusters
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29363946 DOI: 10.1021/acssensors.7b00874
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Sens ISSN: 2379-3694 Impact factor: 7.711