Abstract

Phototheranostics based on luminogens with aggregation-induced emission (AIE) characteristics is captivating increasing research interest nowadays. However, AIE luminogens are inherently featured by inferior absorption coefficients (ε) resulting from the distorted molecular geometry. Besides, molecular innovation of long-wavelength light-excitable AIE luminogens with highly efficient phototheranostic outputs is an appealing yet significantly challenging task. Herein, on the basis of a fused-ring electron acceptor-donator-acceptor (A-D-A) type molecule (IDT) with aggregation-caused quenching (ACQ) properties, molecular engineering smoothly proceeds and successfully yields a novel AIE luminogen (IDT-TPE) via simply modifying tetraphenylethene (TPE) moieties on the sides of IDT backbone. The AIE tendency endows IDT-TPE nanoparticles with enhanced fluorescence brightness and far superior fluorescence imaging performance to IDT nanoparticles for mice tumors. Moreover, IDT-TPE nanoparticles exhibit near-infrared light-excitable features with a high ε of 8.9 × 104 m-1 cm-1 , which is roughly an order of magnitude higher than that of most previously reported AIE luminogens. Combining with their reactive oxygen species generation capability and extremely high photothermal conversion efficiency (59.7%), IDT-TPE nanoparticles actualize unprecedented performance in multimodal phototheranostics. This study thus brings useful insights into the development of versatile phototheranostic materials with great potential for practical cancer theranostics.

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