Coassemble dopamine and GHK tripeptide into fluorescent nanoparticles for pH sensing.
Zheng. Fan F; Guo. Jun J; Khan. Abdul Jamil AJ; Miao. Pandeng P; Zhang. Feng F
Key Findings
- Co‑assembly of oxidized dopamine and GHK creates fluorescent nanoparticles with a high quantum yield (20.82%).
- The nanostructure relies on π‑π stacking between carbon rings and the easy‑oxidation property of dopamine.
- The resulting particles act as a supersensitive, robust pH nanosensor and could inspire future in‑vivo luminescent probes.
Practical Outcomes
- For the biohacker community, this research does not provide a new supplement protocol or direct health benefit. It is a technical advance in sensor design that may eventually lead to biomedical imaging tools, but it has no immediate actionable use for longevity, metabolism, or performance optimization.
Summary
Scientists made tiny glowing particles by mixing a copper‑binding peptide (GHK) with an oxidized form of dopamine. These particles change their light output with pH, making them useful as very sensitive pH sensors, but they are a lab tool, not a health supplement or therapy.
Abstract
Fluorescent nanostructures have been widely applied to biomedical researches and clinical diagnosis such as biolabeling/imaging/sensing and have even acted as therapy reagents. Peptide-based fluorescent nanostructures attract recent interest from biomedical researchers. Inspired by the natural existence of GHK-Cu complex with a growth factor-like effect in human blood, here we have developed a novel approach for designing nanosensors through the co-assembling of two kinds of biomolecules. By making best use of both π-π stacking between carbon rings and the easy-oxidation property of an important transmitter molecule, dopamine (DA), we successfully built up a supersensitive and robust fluorescent pH nanosensor by co-assembling oxidized DA (DA<sub>ox</sub> ) with a tripeptide GHK. The GHK-DA<sub>ox</sub> nanostructures have a quantum yield of 20.82%, which might be the brightest one among all the current co-assembling structures merely through unmodified biomolecules. We envision this approach could open a new avenue for not only hybrid nanostructure construction, but also may inspire the bioengineering of in vivo luminescent probes.
Study Information
pubmed
2020
2020-07-18T00:00:00.000Z
10.1002/bio.3907
3
31