2 research outputs found
Hypochlorous Acid Turn-on Fluorescent Probe Based on Oxidation of Diphenyl Selenide
A BODIPY-based fluorescent probe, <b>HCSe</b>, has been successfully developed for the rapid detection of hypochlorous acid based on the specific HOCl-promoted oxidation of diphenyl selenide in response to the amount of HOCl. Confocal fluorescence microscopy imaging using RAW264.7 cells showed that the new probe <b>HCSe</b> could be used as an effective fluorescent probe for detecting HOCl in living cells
Graphene Oxide Based Nanocarrier Combined with a pH-Sensitive Tracer: A Vehicle for Concurrent pH Sensing and pH-Responsive Oligonucleotide Delivery
We
chemically tuned the oxidation status of graphene oxide (GO) and constructed
a GO-based nanoplatform combined with a pH-sensitive fluorescence
tracer that is designed for both pH sensing and pH-responsive drug
delivery. A series of GOs oxidized to distinct degrees were examined
to optimize the adsorption of the model drug, poly dT<sub>30</sub>. We determined that highly oxidized GO was a superior drug-carrier
candidate in vitro when compared to GOs oxidized to lesser degrees.
In the cell experiment, the synthesized pH-sensitive rhodamine dye
was first applied to monitor cellular pH; under acidic conditions,
protonated rhodamine fluoresces at 588 nm (λ<sub>ex</sub> =
561 nm). When the dT<sub>30</sub>-GO nanocarrier was introduced into
cells, a rhodamine-triggered competition reaction occurred, and this
led to the release of the oligonucleotides and the quenching of rhodamine
fluorescence by GO. Our results indicate high drug loading (FAM-dT<sub>30</sub>/GO = 25/50 μg/mL) and rapid cellular uptake (<0.5
h) of the nanocarrier which can potentially be used for targeted RNAi
delivery to the acidic milieu of tumors