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Repurposing Cyanine NIR-I Dyes Accelerates Clinical Translation of Near-Infrared-II (NIR-II) Bioimaging

Authors :
Qinglai Yang
Shoujun Zhu
Dale O. Kiesewetter
Xiaoyuan Chen
Gang Niu
Haitao Sun
Bryant C. Yung
Alexander L. Antaris
Su Zhao
Zhubin Hu
Rui Tian
Source :
Advanced materials (Deerfield Beach, Fla.).
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

The significantly reduced tissue autofluorescence and scattering in the NIR-II region (1000-1700 nm) opens many exciting avenues for detailed investigation of biological processes in vivo. However, the existing NIR-II fluorescent agents, including many molecular dyes and inorganic nanomaterials, are primarily focused on complicated synthesis routes and unknown immunogenic responses with limited potential for clinical translation. Herein, the >1000 nm tail emission of conventional biocompatible NIR cyanine dyes with emission peaks at 700-900 nm is systematically investigated, and a type of bright dye for NIR-II imaging with high potential for accelerating clinical translation is identified. The asymmetry of the π domain in the S1 state of NIR cyanine dyes is proven to result in a twisted intramolecular charge-transfer process and NIR-II emission, establishing a general rule to guide future NIR-I/II fluorophore synthesis. The screened NIR dyes are identified to possess a bright emission tail in the NIR-II region along with high quantum yield, high molar-extinction coefficient, rapid fecal excretion, and functional groups amenable for bioconjugation. As a result, NIR cyanine dyes can be used for NIR-II imaging to afford superior contrast and real-time imaging of several biological models, facilitating the translation of NIR-II bioimaging to clinical theranostic applications.

Details

ISSN :
15214095 and 10001700
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Advanced materials (Deerfield Beach, Fla.)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fd64dba65b60c4b6225429ebcec21829