An effective signal amplifying strategy for copper (II) sensing by using in situ fluorescent proteins as energy donor of FRET

[Display omitted] •FRET-based reactive copper ion sensor is constructed.•Using in situ fluorescent proteins of urine as the energy donor of FRET is developed.•The sensor displays a remarkable signal enhancement for Cu2+ detection in urine.•The sensor shows a fine performance in visualization detecti...

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Veröffentlicht in:Sensors and actuators. B, Chemical Chemical, 2018-04, Vol.259, p.633-641
Hauptverfasser: Zhang, Qianchen, Zhao, Duoduo, Zhang, Chengwu, Liu, Jinhua, An, Zhongfu, Qin, Xiaofei, Gao, Yongqian, Zhang, Shiyu, Li, Lin, Huang, Wei
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] •FRET-based reactive copper ion sensor is constructed.•Using in situ fluorescent proteins of urine as the energy donor of FRET is developed.•The sensor displays a remarkable signal enhancement for Cu2+ detection in urine.•The sensor shows a fine performance in visualization detection of Cu2+ in a paper-based sensor. Fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) is a reliable, sensitive, and robust assay method for detection of many biological targets. However, it generally needs an externally-introduced label to form the donor-acceptor pair, which could alter the accuracy of the detection. To address this issue, we report herein the FRET-based reactive copper ion sensors by using in situ fluorescent proteins (FP) of human urine or blood serum as the energy donor. Using Bull Serum Albumin (BSA) as model proteins, the sensor exhibits a remarkably fluorescence enhancement when BSA binds to the surface of copper clusters (Cu NCs) base on electrostatic interaction. Conversely, low fluorescence enhancement is observed without using BSA. As proof-of-principle, this positive approach is directly applied to detect Cu2+ using urine as the energy donor, accompanying with a signal enhancement by two factors and low detection limit of 0.5 μM Cu2+. Moreover, the proposed sensor could be applied in other complex environments, such as blood serum or cell culture medium. Consequently, the effectiveness, simplicity and diversity of our proposed strategy enable the development of a class of probes toward complex human environment for rapid, sensitive, and selective detection of targets.
ISSN:0925-4005
1873-3077
DOI:10.1016/j.snb.2017.12.118