Abstract In the following report, a conjugated polyelectrolyte (CPE) blend has been introduced for the first time as a fluorescent probe of membrane organization. Insertion of the blend into the lipid double layer has been rendered possible through formation of a hydrophobic complex by counterion exchange. Changes in membrane physical state from liquid‐disordered (L dis ) to liquid‐ordered (L ord ), and to solid‐ordered (S ord ) result in red shifts of blend excitation (up to Δλ ex =+90 nm) and emission (up to Δλ nm =+37 nm) maxima attributable to backbone planarization of CPEs. We found that blend stoichiometry can be adjusted to attain the best interplay among single polyelectrolytes properties, such as sensitivity and luminescence. The resulting probes therefore allow a bimodal detection of membrane physical state: changes in absorption permit a direct visualization of membrane organization, while variations in emission spectra demonstrate that CPE‐blends are a promising probes that can be used for imaging applications.
Andreas Erhardt, Julian Hungenberg, Linus Hager, Florian Meichsner, Meike Kuhn, Wen Liang Tan, Elena A. Chulanova, Nigel Kirby, Mukundan Mukundan Thelakkat, Christopher R. McNeill
Glenn Quek, Yude Su, Ricardo K. Donato, Ricardo Javier Vázquez, Valéria S. Marangoni, Pei Rou Ng, Mariana C. F. Costa, Binu Kundukad, Konstantin ‘kostya’ Novoselov, A. H. Castro Neto, Guillermo C. Bazan
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