Rational design of a far-red fluorescent probe for endogenous biothiol imbalance induced by hydrogen peroxide in living cells and mice.

Rational design of a far-red fluorescent probe for endogenous biothiol imbalance induced by hydrogen peroxide in living cells and mice. Bioorg Chem. 2020 Aug 26;103:104173 Authors: Lu Z, Sun X, Wang M, Wang H, Fan C, Lin W Abstract Intracellular biothiols are correlated with many diseases such as nerve disorder and Parkinson's disease likely due to a redox imbalance. In this work, we designed an ultrafast fluorescent probe (Cou-DNBS) for biothiols with a large Stokes shift (131 nm). The probe was constructed through linking the 2,4-dinitrobenzenesulfonyl moiety as the specially recognizing biothiols site to an iminocoumarin fluorophore Cou-NH obtained by fusing an additional benzene ring. The presence of biothiols could ultrafast perform a significant fluorescence emission at 617 nm upon the excitation of 480 with the low limits of detection (2.5 nM for Cys, 1.7 nM for Hcy and 0.84 nM for GSH). HRMS spectra as well as theoretical calculations further evidenced the rationale of recognition mechanism. Furthermore, the probe can successfully visualize endogenous biothiol recovery in living cells damaged by H2O2. PMID: 32889381 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Bioorganic Chemistry - Category: Chemistry Authors: Tags: Bioorg Chem Source Type: research