Investigator
Northwest University, School of Medicine
Water-Soluble Fluorescent Sensors for Quantification of Trace Cisplatin in Body Fluids from Clinical Cancer Patients
Accurate quantification of cisplatin (cDDP) in body fluids (blood, urine, and ascites) is crucial in monitoring therapeutic processes, assessing drug metabolism, and optimizing treatment schedules for cancer patients. Nonetheless, due to the inherent fluorescence and complexity of the body fluid matrix, along with the low cDDP concentrations in these fluids during treatment, using fluorescent sensors for fluid detection remains a subject of ongoing research. Herein, a series of water-soluble cDDP-activatable fluorescent sensors was rationally constructed by introducing thioether groups to the xanthene skeleton based on the chalcogenophilicity of platinum. These sensors exhibit excellent sensitivity and certain anti-interference capabilities for sensing cDDP in living cells, rat tissues, and zebrafish. Especially, with a simplified sample pretreatment procedure, for the first time,
Researcher
Northwest University · School of Medicine
Postdoctoral
Northwest University · The college of life sciences
Northwest University · college of chemistry & materials science
Southwest University · School of chemistry and chemical engineering