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A near-infrared fluorescence probe with large Stokes shift for selectively monitoring nitroreductase in living cells and mouse tumor models.

Talanta 2024 March 22
Hypoxia is commonly regarded as a typical feature of solid tumors, which originates from the insufficient supply of oxygen. Herein, the development of an efficient method for assessing hypoxia levels in tumors is strongly desirable. Nitroreductase (NTR) is an overexpressed reductase in the solid tumors, has been served as a potential biomarker to evaluate the degrees of hypoxia. In this work, we elaborately synthesized a new near-infrared (NIR) fluorescence probe (MR) to monitor NTR activity for assessment of hypoxia levels in living cells and in tumors. Upon exposure of NTR, the nitro-unit of MR could be selectively reduced to amino-moiety with the help of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide. Moreover, the obtained fluorophore emitted a prominent NIR fluorescence, because it possessed a classical "push-pull" structure. The MR displayed several distinguished characters toward NTR, including intense NIR fluorescent signals, large Stokes shift, high selectivity and low limit of detection (46 ng/mL). Furthermore, cellular confocal fluorescence imaging results validated that the MR had potential of detecting NTR levels in hypoxic cells. Significantly, using the MR, the elevated of NTR levels were successfully visualized in the tumor-bearing mouse models. Therefore, this detecting platform based on this probe may be tactfully constructed for monitoring the variations of NTR and estimating the degrees of hypoxia in tumors.

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