Primary Amine Functionalized Carbon Dots for Dead and Alive Bacterial Imaging.

Nanomaterials (Basel)

Institute of Biomedical Engineering, College of Life Science, Basic Medical College, Qingdao University, Qingdao 266071, China.

Published: January 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Small molecular dyes used in bacterial imaging face issues like biological toxicity and fluorescence fading, while carbon dots offer a promising alternative due to their low cost and reduced toxicity.
  • This study successfully demonstrates the use of primary amine functionalized carbon dots for imaging both live and dead bacteria, overcoming previous challenges posed by bacterial cell walls.
  • The research highlights the significant enhancement in quantum yield (66.46%) through the use of spermine as a precursor, and introduces a method to chemically modify the dots to improve their staining capabilities for bacterial cells.

Article Abstract

Small molecular dyes are commonly used for bacterial imaging, but they still meet a bottleneck of biological toxicity and fluorescence photobleaching. Carbon dots have shown high potential for bio-imaging due to their low cost and negligible toxicity and anti-photobleaching. However, there is still large space to enhance the quantum yield of the carbon quantum dots and to clarify their mechanisms of bacterial imaging. Using carbon dots for dyeing alive bacteria is difficult because of the thick density and complicated structure of bacterial cell walls. In this work, both dead or alive bacterial cell imaging can be achieved using the primary amine functionalized carbon dots based on their small size, excellent quantum yield and primary amine functional groups. Four types of carbon quantum dots were prepared and estimated for the bacterial imaging. It was found that the spermine as one of precursors can obviously enhance the quantum yield of carbon dots, which showed a high quantum yield of 66.46% and high fluorescence bleaching-resistance (70% can be maintained upon 3-h-irradiation). Furthermore, a mild modifying method was employed to bound ethylenediamine on the surface of the spermine-carbon dots, which is favorable for staining not only the dead bacterial cells but also the alive ones. Investigations of physical structure and chemical groups indicated the existence of primary amine groups on the surface of spermine-carbon quantum dots (which own a much higher quantum yield) which can stain alive bacterial cells visibly. The imaging mechanism was studied in detail, which provides a preliminary reference for exploring efficient and environment-friendly carbon dots for bacterial imaging.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9920602PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nano13030437DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

carbon dots
24
bacterial imaging
20
quantum yield
20
primary amine
16
alive bacterial
12
quantum dots
12
dots
10
bacterial
9
amine functionalized
8
carbon
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!