Widespread multidrug resistance caused by the abuse of antibiotics calls for novel strategies and materials. Gold nanoclusters (AuNCs) are scarcely explored for combating multidrug-resistant (MDR) bacteria in vivo. We herein synthesized a novel class of AuNCs, namely quaternary ammonium (QA) capped AuNCs (QA-AuNCs) as potent antibiotics selectively targeting MDR Gram-positive bacteria, including methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) and vancomycin-resistant Enterococci (VRE), in vivo. QA-AuNCs kill bacteria through a combined physicochemical mechanism, and show excellent therapeutic effects in both a skin infection model and a bacteremia model induced by MRSA. In addition, owing to their intense fluorescence, QA-AuNCs can be used for the discrimination of live/dead bacteria and bacteria counting, suggesting their potential for clinical theranostics.
The intrinsic limitations of conventional batch synthesis have hindered its applications in both solving classical problems and exploiting new frontiers. Microfluidic technology offers a new platform for chemical synthesis toward either molecules or materials, which has promoted the progress of diverse fields such as organic chemistry, materials science, and biomedicine. In this review, we focus on the improved performance of microreactors in handling various situations, and outline the trend of microfluidic synthesis (microsynthesis, μSyn) from simple microreactors to integrated microsystems. Examples of synthesizing both chemical compounds and micro/nanomaterials show the flexible applications of this approach. We aim to provide strategic guidance for the rational design, fabrication, and integration of microdevices for synthetic use. We critically evaluate the existing challenges and future opportunities associated with this burgeoning field.
Fluorescence imaging is a powerful approach for noninvasive and real-time visualization and tracking of biomolecules and biological processes in living systems. The fluorescent chemosensors with dual/triple interplaying sensing mechanisms tend to provide diverse fluorescence signals or amplify the response signals, which are propitious to simultaneously track multiple analytes or to improve the selectivity and sensitivity of the chemosensors. Thus, the development of dual/triple sensing mechanism-based chemosensors has attracted great interest recently. This review highlights the representative cases of the fluorescent chemosensors with dual/triple interplaying sensing mechanisms published since 2010, and these chemosensors are classified according to the types of the interplaying sensing mechanisms, including ICT-FRET, PET-FRET, PET-ICT-ESIPT, etc.
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