Nanosensor for dopamine and glutathione based on the quenching and recovery of the fluorescence of silica-coated quantum dots

Nanochemistry Nanosensor
DOI: 10.1007/s00604-012-0925-z Publication Date: 2012-12-19T02:20:43Z
ABSTRACT
We have constructed a fluorescent nanosensor for dopamine (DA) and glutathione (GSH) in physiologically relevant concentrations. CdTe quantum dots (QDs) were coated with silica, and dopamine-quinone (formed by oxidation of DA) is captured on the surface of silica via dual interactions (hydrogen bonding and electrostatic interaction) and quenches the photoluminescence of the modified QDs by an electron transfer process. GSH, in being a strong reducing agent, can chemically reduce the dopamine-quinone on the QDs, and this results in recovered photoluminescence. There are linear relationships between the concentrations of dopamine and GSH respectively and the intensity of the photoluminescence intensity of the QDs both in the quenched and regenerated form, the ranges being 0.0005 to 0.1 mmol L−1 for dopamine, and 0.1 to 10 mmol L−1 for GSH. The method was applied to the determination of dopamine and GSH in human serum samples with satisfactory results.
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