Homeostasis
of the cellular redox status plays an indispensable
role in diverse physiological and pathological processes. Hypochlorite
anion (ClO–) and glutathione (GSH) represent an
important redox couple to reflect the redox status in living cells.
The current cellular redox probes that detect either ClO– or GSH alone are not accurate enough to monitor the real redox status.
In this work, a reversible photoacoustic (PA) probe, DiOH-BDP, has been synthesized and applied for PA imaging to monitor the
ClO–/GSH couple redox state in an acute liver injury
(ALI) model. The near-infrared PA probe DiOH-BDP features
significant changes in absorption between 648 and 795 nm during the
selective oxidation by ClO– and the reductive recovery
of GSH, which exhibits excellent selectivity and sensitivity toward
ClO– and GSH with the limits of detection of 77.7
nM and 7.2 μM, respectively. Additionally, using PA770 as a detection signal allows for the in situ monitoring of the ClO–/GSH couple, which realizes mapping of the localized
redox status of the ALI by the virtue of a PA imaging system. Therefore,
the probe provides a potentially technical tool to understand redox
imbalance-related pathological formation processes.
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