Measurement of pH in living cells
is a great and decisive
factor
for providing an early and accurate diagnosis factor. Along with this,
the multimodal transverse and longitudinal relaxivity enhancement
potentiality over single modality within a single platform in the
magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) field is a very challenging issue
for diagnostic purposes in the biomedical field of application. Therefore,
this work aims to design a versatile platform by fabricating a novel
nanoprobe through holmium- and manganese-ion doping in carbon quantum
dots (Ho–Mn–CQDs), which can show nearly neutral intracellular
pH sensing and MRI imaging at the same time. These manufactured Ho–Mn–CQDs
acted as excellent pH sensors in the near-neutral range (4.01–8.01)
with the linearity between 6.01 and 8.01, which could be useful for
the intracellular pH-sensing capability. An innumerable number of
carboxyl and amino groups are present on the surface of the prepared
nanoprobe, making it an excellent candidate for pH sensing through
fluorescence intensity quenching phenomena. Cellular uptake and cell
viability experiments were also executed to affirm the intracellular
accepting ability of Ho–Mn–CQDs. Furthermore, with this
pH-sensing quality, these Ho–Mn–CQDs are also capable
of acting as T1–T2 dual modal imaging contrast agents in comparison
with pristine Ho-doped and Mn-doped CQDs. The Ho–Mn–CQDs
showed an increment of r1 and r2 relaxivity values simultaneously
compared with only the negative contrast agent, holmium in holmium-doped
CQDs, and the positive contrast agent, manganese in manganese-doped
CQDs. The above-mentioned observations elucidate that its tiny size,
excitation dependence of fluorescence behavior, low cytotoxicity,
and dual modal contrast imaging capability make it an ideal candidate
for pH monitoring in the near-neutral range and also as a dual modal
MRI imaging contrast enhancement nanoprobe at the same time.