AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers have faced challenges in creating carbon dots (CDs) that emit strong red light, especially under water conditions.
  • The study explores the formation of these CDs using -Phenylenediamine (-PDA) and different acidic/oxidative solvents to enhance their red emission and water dispersibility.
  • Conjugating the CDs with transferrin improved their biocompatibility, allowing successful bioimaging of aggressive neuroblastoma cell lines for the first time.

Article Abstract

In recent years, many researchers have struggled to obtain carbon dots (CDs) that possess strong photoluminescence in the red region of light. Success in this area has been limited, although the past few years have brought several promising reports on this topic. The most successful efforts in this area still seem to struggle from a lack of dispersibility/reduced emission in water. This work endeavors to understand the formation process of CDs that do not possess strong performance in an aqueous environment and to improve their capabilities in bioimaging. -Phenylenediamine (-PDA) is used along with various precursors in several different solvents (varying acidic and oxidative strengths) to understand the formation process behind the structure leading to red emission that is sensitive to water. These results showed that the combination of acid properties and oxidation is essential for this process, and the important reactions are oligomerization of -PDA and the crosslinking of these oligomers to form aromatic structural segments of CDs. These CDs are shown to be capable of quantitatively detecting water in organic solvents. Additionally, we have shown that conjugation with transferrin remarkably enhances the biocompatibility of these CDs. Transferrin-conjugated CDs with better biocompatibility were applied to bioimaging studies of neuroblastoma cell lines with N- and non-N- gene amplification, for the first time. Furthermore, CDs showed versatile bioimaging capability toward a highly aggressive neuroblastoma subgroup of tumors. The importance of creating red-emissive CDs has been well established, and this work is an important step toward understanding their formation and realizing their use in biological systems.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.bioconjchem.1c00544DOI Listing

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