L-Cysteine is a common amino acid, which plays an important role in human livelihood and production. Therefore, a novel method for simultaneous quantitative and qualitative determination of L-Cysteine by colorimetric...
Surface
siloxane (3-aminopropyl triethoxysilane hydrolyzates)-modified silica
materials were used as “initiators”, which resulted
in the release and desorption of intact molecules adsorbed on the
surface of a matrix. A covalently cross-linked MIL-53(Al) material
was used to enhance the ionization of analytes. Herein, we have provided
an efficient matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry
(MALDI-TOF MS) matrix strategy, which responded to both ion and laser
irradiation with low background interference in the low-molecular-weight
(MW) region. The matrixes MIL-53(Al), SBA-15@APTES, SiO2@APTES, SBA-15@APTES@MOF, and SiO2@APTES@MOF were
synthetized and used for the analysis of a series of low-MW compounds
to verify the effectiveness of the strategies. Compared to conventional
matrixes, the surface-modified SBA-15@APTES@MOF and SiO2@APTES@MOF had low background, high sensitivity, extensive applicability,
good stability, and ultrahigh tolerance of salt concentrations. The
detection limits of standard analytes were determined to range from
0.1 to 1 × 10–5 mg/mL for 16 amino acids as
well as citric acid, reserpine, tetraethylammonium chloride, melamine,
bisphenol A, and malachite green. These results could help in designing
more efficient nanostructure-initiator materials and further promote
the application of MALDI-TOF MS.
Reliable probing of cardiolipin (CL) content in dynamic
cellular
milieux presents significant challenges and great opportunities for
understanding mitochondria-related diseases, including cancer, neurodegeneration,
and diabetes mellitus. In intact respiring cells, selectivity and
sensitivity for CL detection are technically demanding due to structural
similarities among phospholipids and compartmental secludedness of
the inner mitochondrial membrane. Here, we report a novel “turn-on”
fluorescent probe HKCL-1M for detecting CL in situ. HKCL-1M displays outstanding sensitivity and selectivity toward
CL through specific noncovalent interactions. In live-cell imaging,
its hydrolyzed product HKCL-1 efficiently retained itself
in intact cells independent of mitochondrial membrane potential (Δψm). The probe robustly co-localizes with mitochondria and outperforms
10-N-nonyl acridine orange (NAO) and Δψm-dependent dyes with superior photostability and negligible
phototoxicity. Our work thus opens up new opportunities for studying
mitochondrial biology through efficient and reliable visualization
of CL in situ.
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