Abstract
In a simple, one-step reaction, we have synthesized a pyridoxal-based chemosensor by reacting tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane (TRIS) together with pyridoxal hydrochloride to yield a Schiff-base ligand that is highly selective for the detection of Zn(ii) ion. Both the ligand and the Zn(ii) complex have been characterized by 1H & 13C NMR, ESI-MS, CHN analyses, and X-ray crystallography. The optical properties of the synthesized ligand were investigated in an aqueous buffer solution and found to be highly selective and sensitive toward Zn(ii) ion through a fluorescence turn-on response. The competition studies reveal the response for zinc ion is unaffected by all alkali and alkaline earth metals; and suppressed by Cu(ii) ion. The ligand itself shows a weak fluorescence intensity (quantum yield, Φ = 0.04), and the addition of zinc ion enhanced the fluorescence intensity 12-fold (quantum yield, Φ = 0.48). The detection limit for zinc ion was 2.77 × 10−8 M, which is significantly lower than the WHO's guideline (76.5 μM). Addition of EDTA to a solution containing the ligand–Zn(ii) complex quenched the fluorescence, indicating the reversibility of Zn(ii) binding. Stoichiometric studies indicated the formation of a 2 : 1 L2Zn complex with a binding constant of 1.2 × 109 M−2 (±25%). The crystal structure of the zinc complex shows the same hydrated L2Zn complex, with Zn(ii) ion binding with an octahedral coordination geometry. We also synthesized the copper(ii) complex of the ligand, and the crystal structure showed the formation of a 1 : 1 adduct, revealing 1-dimensional polymeric networks with octahedral coordinated Cu(ii). The ligand was employed as a sensor to detect zinc ion in HEK293 cell lines derived from human embryonic kidney cells grown in tissue culture which showed strong luminescence in the presence of Zn(ii). We believe that the outstanding turn-on response, sensitivity, selectivity, lower detection limit, and reversibility toward zinc ion will find further application in chemical and biological science.
Highlights
Zinc is the second most abundant metal in the human body, and plays a critical role in many biological processes such as gene expression, protein and DNA synthesis, enzymaticPaper and has no spatial resolution.[10]
We believe that the outstanding turn-on response, sensitivity, selectivity, lower detection limit, and reversibility toward zinc ion will find further application in chemical and biological science
We have focused on an prepared Schiff-base ligand, using readily available reagents, that yields a uorescent probe based on pyridoxaldehyde
Summary
Zinc is the second most abundant metal in the human body, and plays a critical role in many biological processes such as gene expression, protein and DNA synthesis, enzymaticPaper and has no spatial resolution.[10]. We believe that the outstanding turn-on response, sensitivity, selectivity, lower detection limit, and reversibility toward zinc ion will find further application in chemical and biological science.
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