| Literature DB >> 35765346 |
Xu Tong1, Liguo Hao2, Xue Song1, Shuang Wu1, Na Zhang1, Zhongtao Li2, Song Chen3, Peng Hou3.
Abstract
As a vital antioxidant molecule, H2S can make an important contribution to regulating blood vessels and inhibiting apoptosis when present at an appropriate concentration. Higher levels of H2S can interfere with the physiological responses of the respiratory system and central nervous system carried out by mammalian cells. This is associated with many illnesses, such as diabetes, mental decline, cardiovascular diseases, and cancer. Therefore, the accurate measurement of H2S in organisms and the environment is of great significance for in-depth studies of the pathogenesis of related diseases. In this contribution, a new coumarin-carbazole-based fluorescent probe, COZ-DNBS, showing a rapid response and large Stokes shift was rationally devised and applied to effectively sense H2S in vivo and in vitro. Upon using the probe COZ-DNBS, the established fluorescent platform could detect H2S with excellent selectivity, showing 62-fold fluorescence enhancement, a fast-response time (<1 min), high sensitivity (38.6 nM), a large Stokes shift (173 nm), and bright-yellow emission. Importantly, the probe COZ-DNBS works well for monitoring levels of H2S in realistic samples, living MCF-7 cells, and zebrafish, showing that COZ-DNBS is a promising signaling tool for H2S detection in biosystems. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35765346 PMCID: PMC9201871 DOI: 10.1039/d2ra00997h
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 4.036
Scheme 1The synthetic route to the new fluorescent probe COZ-DNBS.
Scheme 2The proposed mechanism involving the fluorescent probe COZ-DNBS for H2S detection.
Fig. 1Fluorescence spectra of COZ-DNBS (10.0 μM) in the presence of different amounts of H2S (0.0–60.0 μM); inset: the colorimetric changes of COZ-DNBS without (a) and with (b) H2S.
Fig. 2The fluorescence intensity of COZ-DNBS at 558 nm as a function of the H2S dose (0.0–60.0 μM); inset: the linear relationship between the concentration of H2S (0.0–5.0 μM) and the fluorescence intensity at 558 nm.
Fig. 3The fluorescence responses of COZ-DNBS (10.0 μM) incubated with various analytes (red bars; 60.0 μM for H2S (26) and 0.5 mM for 1–25, which were Ala, Asn, Arg, Glu, Gln, Met, Ser, His, Pro, Thr, Ile, Cl−, Br−, F−, I−, NO3−, CO32−, SO42−, Zn2+, H2O2, Cys, GSH, and Hcy, respectively); and the detection of H2S (60.0 μM) upon the addition of diverse coexisting competing analytes (gray bars; 0.5 mM for Ala, Asn, Arg, Glu, Gln, Met, Ser, His, Pro, Thr, Ile, Cl−, Br−, F−, I−, NO3−, CO32−, SO42−, Zn2+, H2O2, Cys, GSH, and Hcy (1–25, respectively)). The incubation time was 60 s.
Fig. 4The pH-dependence (2.0–11.0) of the fluorescence intensity of COZ-DNBS (10.0 μM) in H2O/CH3CN (4 : 1, v/v) without (black line) and with (red line) H2S (60.0 μM).
Fig. 5The fluorescence intensity of COZ-DNBS (10.0 μM) over time at 558 nm before (blue line) and after (red line) the addition of H2S.
Fig. 6The viability of MCF-7 cells incubated with different concentrations of COZ-DNBS (2.0–20.0 μM).
Fig. 7Confocal imaging of MCF-7 cells: (A) MCF-7 cells incubated with 10.0 μM COZ-DNBS for 30 min; and (B–D) MCF-7 cells incubated with different concentrations of H2S (10.0, 20.0, and 50.0 μM), followed by treatment with 10.0 μM COZ-DNBS.
Fig. 8Fluorescence imaging of H2S in zebrafish using COZ-DNBS: (a–c) zebrafish incubated with COZ-DNBS (10.0 μM) for 30 min; and (d–f) zebrafish incubated with H2S (50.0 μM) before staining with COZ-DNBS (10.0 μM).