Fluorescence anisotropy has been widely used in developing biosensors and immunoassays, by virtue of the self-reference and environment-sensitive properties. However, fluorescence anisotropic chemical sensors on inorganic ions are limited by… Click to show full abstract
Fluorescence anisotropy has been widely used in developing biosensors and immunoassays, by virtue of the self-reference and environment-sensitive properties. However, fluorescence anisotropic chemical sensors on inorganic ions are limited by the total anisotropy change. To this end, we demonstrate here fluorescence anisotropic ion-selective optodes based on the homo-FRET (Förster resonance energy transfer) of the crowded chromoionophores. The conventional fluorescence on-off mode is transformed into the anisotropic mode. Variation of the target ion concentration changes the inter-chromoionophore distance in the organic sensing phase, leading to different extents of homo-FRET and steady-state anisotropy. A theoretical model is developed by coupling homo-FRET and anisotropy. Anisotropic detections of pH, K+, and Na+ are demonstrated as examples based on the different ionophores for H+, K+, and Na+, respectively. Further, fluorescence imaging of the nano-optodes, plasticized poly(vinyl chloride) sensing films, and live cells are demonstrated using a homemade fluorescence anisotropic imaging platform. The results form the basis of an ion-selective analytical method operating in the fluorescence anisotropic mode, which could potentially be applied to other fluorescence on-off probes based on homo-FRET.
               
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