Bruen, Danielle ORCID: 0000-0002-4478-9766, Delaney, Colm ORCID: 0000-0002-4397-0133, Florea, Larisa ORCID: 0000-0002-4704-2393 and Diamond, Dermot ORCID: 0000-0003-2944-4839 (2016) Boronic acid derivatives for indirect fluorescent glucose sensing. In: 3rd Insight Student Conference 2016, 14 Sept. 2016, Dublin City University, Dublin, Ireland.
Abstract
Boronic acids (BAs) are well-known for their interactions with diol-containing compounds like glucose. Fluorescent moieties are commonly considered to enable monitoring of this interaction by changes in fluorescence. Hence, a novel cationic pyrimidine BA derivative, DBA2, has been investigated for it’s indirect glucose sensing capabilities. This approach aims to develop smart-contact lenses that will allow people suffering from diabetes to track their condition continuously and non-invasively in real-time using a mobile phone application.
1. Introduction
Diabetes is a worldwide incurable disease known to have acute and chronic health effects [1]. Blindness, heart or kidney failures are among the most common life-threatening effects of diabetes [1]. Monitoring physiological blood-glucose concentrations is a means of managing the disease, however few non-invasive continuous monitoring methods currently exist [1]. Consequently, there is considerable interested in using aqueous ocular fluid as a sample medium for tracking the disease marker glucose.
2. The Sensing Mechanism
Incorporation of a BA component into charged molecules, can be used to induce quenching in the emission of a known fluorescent molecule, thereby creating a two-component sensing system [1-2]. In this approach, the fluorescence of 7-hydroxycoumarin, is monitored. Increasing concentrations of our novel BA sensor, quenches the fluorescence of 7HC. The change in fluorescence intensity of the system is achieved via the formation of a ground-state complex, through electrostatic interactions between the fluorophore and BA-quencher [1-2]. In the presence of saccharides, the Lewis acidic BA moiety of the sensor is known to form strong, reversible interactions [2]. This leads to the formation of a boronate diester [2], resulting in the dissociation of the BA-quencher and fluorophore ground-state complex, causing a sequential recovery of fluorescence in 7HC [1-2].
Figure 1: Indirect glucose-sensing mechanism.
3. Fluorescence
3.1 Fluorescence Quenching
Photophysical characterisation shows that upon increased BA-quencher concentrations an extremely efficient and sequential decrease in the fluorescence intensity is observed in 7HC.
Figure 2: Fluorescence quenching of 7HC with DBA2 at pH 8.6 when excited at 370 nm.
3.2 Fluorescence Recovery
The introduction of glucose to this two-component system allows for a recovery in fluorescence, which can be used to indirectly quantify glucose concentrations.
Figure 3: Fluorescence recovery of 7HC with glucose (up to 100 mM) at pH 8.6 when excited at 370 nm.
4. Conclusion
To conclude, this glucose-sensing switch shows a high sensitivity for sugar detection, where DBA2 showed great potential to act as a glucose sensor exhibiting a decrease in fluorescence intensity by 98% and on incremental additions of glucose, the fluorescence can be recovered. Moreover, the inclusion of anchoring moieties to the BA-quencher shows wonderful potential for the incorporation of this molecule into porous hydrogel platforms.
The authors are grateful for financial support from SFI under the Insight initiative, grant number SFI/12/RC/2289.
5. References
[1] J. T. Suri, D. B. Cordes, F. E. Cappuccio, R. A. Wessling, B. Singaram, Angew. Chem. Int. Ed., 42:5857-5859, 2009.
[2] Y. H. Li, L. Zhang, J. Huang, R. P. Liang, J. D. Qiu, Chem. Commun, 49:5180-5182, 2013.
Metadata
Item Type: | Conference or Workshop Item (Poster) |
---|---|
Event Type: | Conference |
Refereed: | Yes |
Additional Information: | The authors are grateful for financial support from SFI under the Insight initiative, grant number SFI/12/RC/2289 |
Uncontrolled Keywords: | Diabetes; Glucose Biosensing; Fluorescence; Boronic Acids |
Subjects: | Engineering > Materials Physical Sciences > Photochemistry Physical Sciences > Organic chemistry Medical Sciences > Health Biological Sciences > Biosensors |
DCU Faculties and Centres: | DCU Faculties and Schools > Faculty of Science and Health > School of Chemical Sciences Research Initiatives and Centres > INSIGHT Centre for Data Analytics Research Initiatives and Centres > National Centre for Sensor Research (NCSR) |
Funders: | Science Foundation Ireland, Enterprise Ireland, European Framework Programme 7 |
ID Code: | 21400 |
Deposited On: | 06 Oct 2016 10:39 by Danielle Bruen . Last Modified 26 Sep 2018 12:34 |
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