β-d-Glucuronidase (GUS) plays a pivotal role in both clinical treatment assessment and environmental monitoring. Existing tools for GUS detection suffer from (1) poor continuity due to a gap between the… Click to show full abstract
β-d-Glucuronidase (GUS) plays a pivotal role in both clinical treatment assessment and environmental monitoring. Existing tools for GUS detection suffer from (1) poor continuity due to a gap between the optimal pH of the probes and the enzyme and (2) diffusion from the detection site due to lack of an anchoring structure. Here we report a novel GUS pH-matching and endoplasmic reticulum-anchoring strategy for GUS recognition. The new fluorescent probe tool was termed ERNathG, which was designed and synthesized with β-d-glucuronic acid as the GUS-specific recognition site and 4-hydroxy-1,8-naphthalimide as a fluorescence reporting group, with a p-toluene sulfonyl as an anchoring group. This probe enabled the continuous and anchored detection of GUS without pH-adjustment for the related assessment of common cancer cell lines and gut bacteria. The probe's properties are far superior to those of commonly used commercial molecules.
               
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