1 research outputs found
A Water-Soluble Wavy Coordination Polymer of Cu(II) as a Turn-On Luminescent Probe for Histidine and Histidine-Rich Proteins/Peptides
Histidine
plays an essential role in most biological systems. Changes
in the homeostasis of histidine and histidine-rich proteins are connected
to several diseases. Herein, we report a water-soluble Cu(II) coordination
polymer, labeled CuCP, for the fluorimetric detection of histidine
and histidine-rich proteins and peptides. Single-crystal structure
determination of CuCP revealed a two-dimensional wavy network structure
in which a carboxylate group connects the individual Cu(II) dimer
unit in a syn–anti conformation. The weakly luminescent and
water-soluble CuCP shows turn-on blue emission in the presence of
histidine and histidine-rich peptides and proteins. The polymer can
also stain histidine-rich proteins via gel electrophoresis. The limits
of quantifications for histidine, glycine-histidine, serine-histidine,
human serum albumin (HSA), bovine serum albumin, pepsin, trypsin,
and lysozyme were found to be 300, 160, 600, 300, 600, 800, 120, and
290 nM, respectively. Utilizing the fluorescence turn-on property
of CuCP, we measured HSA quantitatively in the urine samples. We also
validated the present urinary HSA measurement assay with existing
analytical techniques. Job’s plot, 1H NMR, high-resolution
mass spectrometry (HRMS), electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), fluorescence,
and UV–vis studies confirmed the ligand displacement from CuCP
in the presence of histidine