Abstract

Solvent-free soft biomaterials with fluorescent property are highly attractive because of their wide prospective applications in bioimaging and anticounterfeiting. However, in solvent-free condition, developing soft fluorescent DNA materials is very challenging. In this study, a type of fluorescent solvent-free DNA thermotropic liquid crystal (DNA-TPEA) is developed via the electrostatic complexation of DNA and tetraphenylethene-containing ammonium surfactant TPEA. Under UV light, DNA-TPEA could give bright luminescence with good quantum yield, which has been tested as an anticounterfeiting labeling biomaterial working at high temperatures and in aqueous condition. An investigation on the photoluminescence lifetime of DNA-TPEA indicates that the TPEA molecules are in two different environments, and for which a working mechanism is illustrated. This work provides a new strategy for developing fluorescent biomaterials in solvent-free condition by fusing AIE surfactants and biomolecules together via electrostatic force, which gains synthetic convenience compared to the covalent modification of biomolecules with fluorescent proteins.

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