| Literature DB >> 34818632 |
Lena Golubewa1,2, Tatsiana Kulahava2, Aliona Klimovich3, Danielis Rutkauskas1, Ieva Matulaitiene3, Renata Karpicz1, Nikita Belko4,5, Dmitri Mogilevtsev5, Alena Kavalenka6, Marina Fetisova7, Petri Karvinen7, Yuri Svirko7, Polina Kuzhir7.
Abstract
In living organisms, redox reactions play a crucial role in the progression of disorders accompanied by the overproduction of reactive oxygen and reactive chlorine species, such as hydrogen peroxide and hypochlorous acid, respectively. We demonstrate that green fluorescence graphene quantum dots (GQDs) can be employed for revealing the presence of the hypochlorous acid in aqueous solutions and cellular systems. Hypochlorous acid modifies the oxygen-containing groups of the GQD, predominantly opens epoxide ring C-O-C, forms excessive C=O bonds and damages the carbonic core of GQDs. These changes, which depend on the concentration of the hypochlorous acid and exposure time, manifest themselves in the absorbance and fluorescence spectra of the GQD, and in the fluorescence lifetime. We also show that the GQD fluorescence is not affected by hydrogen peroxide. This finding makes GQDs a promising sensing agent for selective detecting reactive chlorine species produced by neutrophils. Neutrophils actively accumulate GQDs allowing to visualize cells and to examine the redox processes via GQDs fluorescence. At high concentrations GQDs induce neutrophil activation and myeloperoxidase release, leading to the disruption of GQD structure by the produced hypochlorous acid. This makes the GQDs a biodegradable material suitable for various biomedical applications.Entities:
Keywords: graphene quantum dots; hypochlorous acid; myeloperoxidase; neutrophils; sensors
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34818632 DOI: 10.1088/1361-6528/ac3ce4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanotechnology ISSN: 0957-4484 Impact factor: 3.874