“…A high-resolution charge-coupled device (CCD) spectrometer (QEPro, Ocean Optics, Inc., USA) was used to record the autofluorescence spectra of glycated proteins. 22 On the emission side, a 300 nm long-pass filter (FF01-300/LP, Semrock, USA) was used to block the excitation light from the LED, allowing only the autofluorescence spectra of glycated proteins. The glycated protein samples (incubated for three days) were loaded into an in-house designed quartz multi-well plate (with 36 quartz wells), and the dUV-AF spectra were then recorded at room temperature (25 °C).…”