Hypochlorite, as an important reactive
oxygen species
(ROS), plays
a vital role in many physiological and pathological processes, but
an excess concentration of hypochlorite (ClO–) may
become toxic to humans and cause disease. Hence, the selective and
rapid detection of hypochlorite (ClO–) is necessary
for human safety. Here, we report a novel near-infrared (NIR) fluorescence
“turn-on” and highly selective benzophenoxazinium chloride-based
fluorescent probe, BPH (benzophenoxazinium dihydroxy
benzaldehyde), for hypochlorite detection. Due to hypochlorite-induced
vicinal diol oxidation to the corresponding ortho benzoquinone derivative,
the photoinduced electron transfer (PET) process, which was operating
from vicinal diol to the benzophenoxazinium chloride receptor moiety,
was suddenly inhibited, as a result of which strong NIR fluorescence
“turn-on” emission was observed. The detection limit
of BPH was found to be 2.39 × 10–10 M, or 0.23 nM. BPH was successfully applied for exogenous
and endogenous hypochlorite detection in live MDA-MB 231 cells.