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Biochemistry, Biophysics, and Structural Biology Commons

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University of Windsor

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Zebrafish

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Full-Text Articles in Biochemistry, Biophysics, and Structural Biology

Carbon Dots For Specific “Off-On” Sensing Of Co2+ And Edta For In Vivo Bioimaging, Xiangping Wen, Guangming Wen, Wenyan Li, Zhonghua Zhao, Xine Duan, Wenjun Yan, John F. Trant, Yingqi Li Apr 2021

Carbon Dots For Specific “Off-On” Sensing Of Co2+ And Edta For In Vivo Bioimaging, Xiangping Wen, Guangming Wen, Wenyan Li, Zhonghua Zhao, Xine Duan, Wenjun Yan, John F. Trant, Yingqi Li

Chemistry and Biochemistry Publications

Fluorescent carbon dots (CDs) were hydrothermally synthesized from a mixture of frozen tofu, ethylenediamine and phosphoric acid in an efficient 64% yield. The resulting CDs exhibit good water solubility, low cytotoxicity, high stability, and excellent biocompatibility. The CDs selectively and sensitively detect Co2+ through fluorescent quenching with a detection limit of 58 nM. Fluorescence can be restored through the introduction of EDTA, and this phenomenon can be used to quantify EDTA in solution with a detection limit of 98 nM. As both analytes are detected by the same CD platform, this is an “off-on” fluorescence sensor for Co2+ and EDTA. …


Neuro And Hepatic Toxicological Profile Of (S)-2,4-Diaminobutanoic Acid In Embryonic, Adolescent And Adult Zebrafish, Rosa-Maria Ferraiuolo, Daniel Meister, Dominique Leckie, Jonathan Franke, Lisa A. Porter, John F. Trant Aug 2019

Neuro And Hepatic Toxicological Profile Of (S)-2,4-Diaminobutanoic Acid In Embryonic, Adolescent And Adult Zebrafish, Rosa-Maria Ferraiuolo, Daniel Meister, Dominique Leckie, Jonathan Franke, Lisa A. Porter, John F. Trant

Chemistry and Biochemistry Publications

(S)-2,4-Diaminobutanoic acid (DABA) is a noncanonical amino acid often co-produced by cyanobacteria along with β-N-methylamino-l-alanine (BMAA) in algal blooms. Although BMAA is a well-established neurotoxin, the toxicity of DABA remains unclear. As part of our development of biocompatible materials, we wish to make use of DABA as both a building block and as the end-product of enzymatically-induced depolymerization; however, if it is toxic at very low concentrations, this would not be possible. We examined the toxicity of DABA using both in vivo embryonic and adult zebrafish models. At higher sub-lethal concentrations (700 µM), the fish demonstrated early …