Optical PEBBLE (probes encapsulated by biologically localized embedding) nanosensors have been developed for dissolved oxygen using organically modified silicate (ormosil) nanoparticles as a matrix. The ormosil nanoparticles are prepared via a sol-gel-based process, which includes the formation of core particles with phenyltrimethoxysilane as a precursor followed by the formation of a coating layer with methyltrimethoxysilane as a precursor. The average diameter of the resultant particles is 120 nm. These sensors incorporate the oxygen-sensitive platinum porphyrin dye as an indicator and an oxygen-insensitive dye as a reference for ratiometric intensity measurement. Two pairs of indicator dye and reference dye, respectively, platinum(II) octaethylporphine and 3,3'-dioctadecyloxacarbocyanine perchlorate, and platinum(II) octaethylporphine ketone and octaethylporphine, were used. The sensors have excellent sensitivity with an overall quenching response of 97%, as well as excellent linearity of the Stern-Volmer plot (r(2) = 0.999) over the whole range of dissolved oxygen concentrations (0-43 ppm). In vitro intracellular changes of dissolved oxygen due to cell respiration were monitored, with gene gun injected PEBBLEs, in rat C6 glioma cells. A significant change was observed with a fluorescence ratio increase of up to 500% after 1 h, for nine different sets of cells, which corresponds to a 90% reduction in terms of dissolved oxygen concentration. These results clearly show the validity of the delivery method for intracellular studies of PEBBLE sensors, as well as the high sensitivity, which is needed to achieve real-time measurements of intracellular dissolved oxygen concentration.
Fluorescent spherical nanosensors, or PEBBLEs (probes encapsulated by biologically localized embedding), in the 500 nm-1 microm size range have been developed using decyl methacrylate as a matrix. A general scheme for the polymerization and introduction of sensing components creates a matrix that allows for the utilization of the highly selective ionophores used in poly(vinyl chloride) and decyl methacrylate ion-selective electrodes. We have applied these optically silent ionophores to fluorescence-based sensing by using ion-exchange and highly selective pH chromoionophores. This allows the tailoring of selective submicrometer sensors for use in intracellular measurements of important analytes for which selective enough fluorescent probes do not exist. The protocol for sensor development has been worked out for potassium sensing. It is based on the BME-44 ionophore (2-dodecyl-2-methyl-1,3-propanediylbis[N-[5'nitro(benzo-15-crown-5)-4'-yl]carbamate]). The general scheme should work for any available ionophore used in PVC or decyl methacrylate ion-selective electrodes, with minor adjustments to account for differences in ionophore charge and analyte binding constant. The reversible and highly selective sensors developed have a subsecond response time and an adjustable dynamic range. Applications to live C6 glioma cells demonstrate their utility; the intracellular potassium activity is followed in real time upon extracellular administration of kainic acid.
Modulated optical nanoprobes (MOONs) are microscopic (spherical and aspherical) fluorescent particles designed to emit varying intensities of light in a manner that depends on particle orientation. MOONs can be prepared over a broad size range, allowing them to be tailored to applications including intracellular sensors, using submicrometer MOONs, and immunoassays, using 1−10 μm MOONs. When particle orientation is controlled remotely, using magnetic fields (MagMOONs), it allows modulation of fluorescence intensity in a selected temporal pattern. In the absence of external fields, or material that responds to external fields, the particles tumble erratically due to Brownian thermal forces (Brownian MOONs). These erratic changes in orientation cause the MOONs to blink. The temporal pattern of blinking reveals information about the local rheological environment and any forces and torques acting on the MOONs, including biomechanical forces as observed in macrophages. The rotational diffusion rate of Brownian MOONs is inversely proportional to the particle volume and hydrodynamic shape factor, for constant temperature and viscosity. Changes in the particle volume and shape due to binding, deformation, or aggregation can be studied using the temporal time pattern from the probes. The small size and the large number of MOONs that can be viewed simultaneously provide local measurements of physical properties, in both homogeneous and inhomogeneous media, as well as global statistical ensemble properties.
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