Abstract

Developing high-quality NIR-II fluorophores (emission in 1000–1700 nm) for in vivo imaging is of great significance. Benzothiadiazole-core fluorophores are an important class of NIR-II dyes, yet ongoing limitations such as aggregation-caused quenching in aqueous milieu and non-activatable response are still major obstacles for their biological applications. Here, we devise an activatable nanoprobe to address these limitations. A molecular probe named BTPE-NO2 is synthesized by linking a benzothiadiazole core with two tetraphenylene groups serving as hydrophobic molecular rotors, followed by incorporating two nitrophenyloxoacetamide units at both ends of the core as recognition moieties and fluorescence quenchers. An FDA-approved amphiphilic polymer Pluronic F127 is then employed to encapsulate the molecular BTPE-NO2 to render the nanoprobe BTPE-NO2@F127. The pathological levels of H2O2 in the disease sites cleave the nitrophenyloxoacetamide groups and activate the probe, thereby generating strong fluorescent emission (950~1200 nm) and ultrasound signal for multi-mode imaging of inflammatory diseases. The nanoprobe can therefore function as a robust tool for detecting and imaging the disease sites with NIR-II fluorescent and multispectral optoacoustic tomography (MSOT) imaging. Moreover, the three-dimensional MSOT images can be obtained for visualizing and locating the disease foci.

Highlights

  • Developing high-quality NIR-II fluorophores for in vivo imaging is of great significance

  • The nanoprobe BTPE-NO2@F127 was employed in the diagnosis of three inflammatory diseases in mouse models, including the trazodone-induced liver injury, the liver ischemia/ reperfusion injury, and the interstitial cystitis, so as to evaluate its capability for detecting and imaging inflammatory disease sites via responding to the in situ endogenous biomarker

  • Our results perceptibly indicate that the nanoprobe BTPE-NO2@F127 can function as a tool for biomarker-activated detection and imaging of NIR-II imaging

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Developing high-quality NIR-II fluorophores (emission in 1000–1700 nm) for in vivo imaging is of great significance. Benzothiadiazole-core fluorophores are an important class of NIR-II dyes, yet ongoing limitations such as aggregation-caused quenching in aqueous milieu and non-activatable response are still major obstacles for their biological applications. Developing high-quality NIR-II fluorophores for in vivo imaging is of great significance and has a major impact on the field of preclinical and clinical applications. Prime limitations associated with such large and planar conjugation include poor water solubility and the accompanying fluorescence quenching because of the aggregation in aqueous medium, and these limitations have become the major obstacles for exploiting these types of fluorophores in biological applications

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call