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    Persistent Luminescence Nanosensors: A Generalized Optode-based Platform for Autofluorescence-free Sensing in Biological Systems

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    Fluorescent nanosensors have drastically progressed our ability to accelerate diagnostics and quantify cellular dynamics in real time. Their modular assembly allows for facile sensor tuning, leading to a large expansion of analytes and systems that can be analyzed. Still, separating sensor signals from background optical signatures remains a major hurdle in the field. Exploiting this modular synthesis, we merged optode-based sensing with near-infrared emitting ZnGa2O4:Cr3+ persistent luminescence nanoparticles (PLNPs) to create functional nanocompo- sites for autofluorescence-free “glow-in-the-dark” sensing. We hydrophobically modified the PLNP surface with covalently bound ligands and incorporated the PLNPs into the polymeric core of optode-based nanoparticles. We demonstrate persistent luminescence nanosensors (PLNs) for five different analytes (K+, Na+, Ca2+, pH, and O2) based on two different sensing mechanisms. The PLNs allowed us to achieve autofluorescence-free quantification of K+ in fetal bovine serum and ratiometric metabolic monitoring of microbial samples with time-resolved luminescence acquisition. We foresee that this approach will allow for high signal-to-noise ratios while sensing in optically challenging samples
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