Development of a Charge-Mediated Disaggregation-Induced Fluorescence Enhancement Platform Using NS-Carbon Dots for Metformin Quantification and Pharmacokinetic Studies.
Yousef A Bin Jardan, Mohamed M El-Wekil, Mohamed R Elmasry, Ashraf M Mahmoud, Al-Montaser Bellah H Ali
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
A novel ratiometric fluorometric sensor has been developed utilizing dual-emission nitrogen and sulfur co-doped carbon dots (NS-CDs) for the sensitive determination of metformin. The sensing mechanism relies on a unique disaggregation phenomenon observed under acidic conditions, where electrostatic repulsion between positively charged NS-CDs and metformin molecules leads to enhanced fluorescence emission. Upon metformin addition, the NS-CDs exhibit differential enhancement of their characteristic emission peaks, with the 562 nm peak showing markedly greater amplification than the 365 nm peak. This distinctive response enabled the development of a ratiometric detection approach using the F562/F365 intensity ratio as an analytical signal, providing enhanced measurement reliability by minimizing biological matrix interferences. The sensor demonstrated excellent analytical performance with a linear response range of 0.05-0.9 µM and an impressive detection limit of 15 nM, surpassing the sensitivity of many previously reported methods. The method exhibited remarkable selectivity toward metformin in the presence of common interferents including co-administered drugs, biomolecules, and ionic species typically present in plasma samples. The practical utility of the sensor was validated through successful application in pharmacokinetic studies in rabbit plasma following oral metformin administration, demonstrating its potential for therapeutic drug monitoring and bioanalytical applications. This sensing platform combines high sensitivity, excellent selectivity, and rapid response time, making it a promising tool for metformin quantification in complex biological matrices.
期刊介绍:
Journal of Fluorescence is an international forum for the publication of peer-reviewed original articles that advance the practice of this established spectroscopic technique. Topics covered include advances in theory/and or data analysis, studies of the photophysics of aromatic molecules, solvent, and environmental effects, development of stationary or time-resolved measurements, advances in fluorescence microscopy, imaging, photobleaching/recovery measurements, and/or phosphorescence for studies of cell biology, chemical biology and the advanced uses of fluorescence in flow cytometry/analysis, immunology, high throughput screening/drug discovery, DNA sequencing/arrays, genomics and proteomics. Typical applications might include studies of macromolecular dynamics and conformation, intracellular chemistry, and gene expression. The journal also publishes papers that describe the synthesis and characterization of new fluorophores, particularly those displaying unique sensitivities and/or optical properties. In addition to original articles, the Journal also publishes reviews, rapid communications, short communications, letters to the editor, topical news articles, and technical and design notes.