In
this work, a bottom-up strategy is developed to synthesize water-soluble
molybdenum disulfide quantum dots (MoS2 QDs) through a
simple, one-step hydrothermal method using ammonium tetrathiomolybdate
[(NH4)2MoS4] as the precursor and
hydrazine hydrate as the reducing agent. The as-synthesized MoS2 QDs are few-layered with a narrow size distribution, and
the average diameter is about 2.8 nm. The resultant QDs show excitation-dependent
blue fluorescence due to the polydispersity of the QDs. Moreover,
the fluorescence can be quenched by hyaluronic acid (HA)-functionalized
gold nanoparticles through a photoinduced electron-transfer mechanism.
Hyaluronidase (HAase), an endoglucosidase, can cleave HA into proangiogenic
fragments and lead to the aggregation of gold nanoparticles. As a
result, the electron transfer is blocked and fluorescence is recovered.
On the basis of this principle, a novel fluorescence sensor for HAase
is developed with a linear range from 1 to 50 U/mL and a detection
limit of 0.7 U/mL.