Single-photon-driven up-/down-conversion nanohybrids for in vivo mercury detection and realtime tracking

Cited 13 time in scopus
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Title
Single-photon-driven up-/down-conversion nanohybrids for in vivo mercury detection and realtime tracking
Author(s)
Sung Eun Seo; Chul Soon Park; Seon Joo Park; Kyung Ho Kim; Jiyeon Lee; Jinyeong Kim; S H Lee; H S Song; Tai Hwan Ha; J H Kim; H W Yim; H I Kim; Oh Seok Kwon
Bibliographic Citation
Journal of Materials Chemistry A, vol. 8, pp. 1668-1677
Publication Year
2020
Abstract
A multifunctional assay with up-/down-conversion (UC/DC) nanohybrids which enables the detection and real-time tracking of hazardous molecules has been developed for use in the field of photoluminescence (PL) point-of-care testing due to its cost and convenience. In particular, innovative approaches such as dual or multimodal imaging and detection under only a single-photon pulse system are highly difficult owing to the issues of device simplification and miniaturization. In this work, we first demonstrated single-photon-driven UC/DC dual-modal PL nanohybrids and showed their high performance in in vivo mercury detection and real-time tracking in a mussel simultaneously. Specifically, UC/DC nanohybrids capable of being stimulated by a single photon were presented via a facile and versatile strategy by combining DC fluorophores for heavy metal ion screening with triplet-triplet annihilation upconversion (TTA-UC) nanocapsules for real-time tracking. By adopting the advantages of the structural transformation of DC fluorophores and highly stable TTA-UC nanocapsules, the outstanding monitoring performance of a standard heavy metal ion (i.e. Hg2+) was achieved by a dual-modal PL assay with nanohybrids, exhibiting ultra-sensitivity (under 1 nM) and high-selectivity. Interestingly, their application in the real world was also remarkable in screening and tracking of mercury in mussels. This single-photon-driven UC/DC convergence system will provide powerful analytical methodologies for target detection and real-time tracking in vivo and will attract widespread attention from researchers in the fields of PL nanomaterials and fluorophores.
ISSN
2050-7488
Publisher
Royal Soc Chem
Full Text Link
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9ta10921h
Type
Article
Appears in Collections:
Division of Research on National Challenges > Infectious Disease Research Center > 1. Journal Articles
Division of Bio Technology Innovation > Core Research Facility & Analysis Center > 1. Journal Articles
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