Abstract

Poisonous histamine is accumulated in stale meat and fermented foods. The rapid and stable detection of histamine is essential for food safety. Herein, a ratiometric fluorometric method for histamine detection was designed through in situ preparing double-stranded DNA‑copper nanoclusters (dsDNA-Cu NCs) stained with 4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI). dsDNA-Cu NCs with red emission were rapidly synthesized via mixing Cu2+, ascorbate and dsDNA at room temperature for 5 min. When DAPI was added during preparation, DAPI coordinated with the Cu element accompanied by the quenched red emission of dsDNA-Cu NCs, and DAPI bound to dsDNA together with the enhanced blue emission of DAPI. Upon adding DAPI and histamine simultaneously, the coordination of histamine with the Cu element further decreased the red emission of dsDNA-Cu NCs, and drove the movement of DAPI from the Cu element to dsDNA along with the enhanced blue emission of DAPI. Significantly, ratiometric fluorescence was insensitive to variations in instrument and environment, causing stable measurement. Meanwhile, in situ synthesis integrated probe preparation with analyte detection, reducing time consumption. Additionally, this method quantified histamine in the concentration range of 7–50 μM with a detection limit of 3.6 μM. It was applied to determining histamine in food with satisfactory accuracy and precision.

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