Carbon monoxide (CO) is a toxic, hazardous gas that has a colorless and odorless nature. On the other hand, CO possesses some physiological roles as a signaling molecule that regulates neurotransmitters in addition to its hazardous effects. Because of the dual nature of CO, there is a need to develop a sensitive, selective, and rapid method for its detection. Herein, we designed and synthesized a turn-on fluorescence probe, 2-(2′-nitrophenyl)-4(3H)-quinazolinone (NPQ), for the detection of CO. NPQ provided a turn-on fluorescence response to CO and the fluorescence intensity at 500 nm was increased with increasing the concentration of CO. This fluorescence enhancement could be attributed to the conversion of the nitro group of NPQ to an amino group by the reducing ability of CO. The fluorescence assay for CO using NPQ as a reagent was confirmed to have a good linear relationship in the range of 1.0 to 50 µM with an excellent correlation coefficient (r) of 0.997 and good sensitivity down to a limit of detection at 0.73 µM (20 ppb) defined as mean blank+3SD. Finally, we successfully applied NPQ to the preparation of a test paper that can detect CO generated from charcoal combustion.
Although benzofuran-2-boronic acid hardly emits fluorescence, it can be rapidly converted to a highly fluorescent benzofuran dimer after mixing with a palladium catalyst and amine. We found that a fluorescence enhancement accompanying dimerization was quantitatively promoted upon increasing the concentration of amine. In the present study, we developed a simple fluorescence assay for amines based on the promotive effect. As the result of a fluorescence measurement of the reaction mixture of 19 kinds of typical amines, it was found that tertiary amines including triethylamine (TEA) provided a significant fluorescence enhancement. Finally, the fluorogenic reaction could be applied to develop a high-throughput fluorescent microplate assay for TEA with the limit of detection (blank + 3SD) of 0.091 μM.
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