Abstract

Fluorescence based intracellular pH nanoprobes have been developed that overcomes the limitations imposed by shallow penetration depth of ultraviolet excitation, photostability, phototoxicity, and interference from background autofluorescence. In this study, we have constructed a Förster Resonance Energy Transfer (FRET) based pH nanoprobe using upconversion nanoparticle (UCNP) as a donor (excitation/emission @ 980/540 nm, green channel), and mOrange fluorescent protein (excitation/emission @ 548/566 nm, red channel) as acceptor. The UCNP-mOrange nanoprobe could be fluorescently imaged with 980 nm excitation, having deep penetration depth, by a fluorescence microscope on a coverslip, or uptaken in a single HeLa cell. The cellular upatake of these nanoparticles were confirmed by transmission electron microscope study. The FRET probes, with a FRET efficiency of ~20% at physiological pH of 7.0, have simultaneous self-ratiometric and ratiometric features varying linearly with local pH. The probe exhibits high accuracy, sensitivity, reversibility, and stability over a wide range of pH (3.0–8.0). The fluorescence intensity ratio from individual green, and red channels in fluorescence microscopic images could be used to estimate the pH of the intracellular compartments of HeLa cell from the pH dependent ratiometric calibration. Nigericin mediated intracellular pH (3.0, 5.0, and 7.0) could be accurately estimated from the CLSM derived FRET ratio. The pH probes demonstrate high stability and reversibility when switched between pH 3, and 8 for at least 5 cycles.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call