posted on 2022-06-22, 18:37authored byPriyanka Srivastava, Isabella Tavernaro, Claudia Genger, Pia Welker, Oskar Hübner, Ute Resch-Genger
A first tricolor
fluorescent pH nanosensor is presented, which
was rationally designed from biocompatible carboxylated polystyrene
nanoparticles and two analyte-responsive molecular fluorophores. Its
fabrication involved particle staining with a blue-red-emissive dyad,
consisting of a rhodamine moiety responsive to acidic pH values and
a pH-inert quinoline fluorophore, followed by the covalent attachment
of a fluorescein dye to the particle surface that signals neutral
and basic pH values with a green fluorescence. These sensor particles
change their fluorescence from blue to red and green, depending on
the pH and excitation wavelength, and enable ratiometric pH measurements
in the pH range of 3.0–9.0. The localization of the different
sensor dyes in the particle core and at the particle surface was confirmed
with fluorescence microscopy utilizing analogously prepared polystyrene
microparticles. To show the application potential of these polystyrene-based
multicolor sensor particles, fluorescence microscopy studies with
a human A549 cell line were performed, which revealed the cellular
uptake of the pH nanosensor and the differently colored emissions
in different cell organelles, that is, compartments of the endosomal-lysosomal
pathway. Our results demonstrate the underexplored potential of biocompatible
polystyrene particles for multicolor and multianalyte sensing and
bioimaging utilizing hydrophobic and/or hydrophilic stimuli-responsive
luminophores.