| Literature DB >> 20597468 |
Madhuri Dasari1, Sungmun Lee, Jay Sy, Dongin Kim, Seungjun Lee, Milton Brown, Michael Davis, Niren Murthy.
Abstract
Cell necrosis is central to the progression of numerous diseases, and imaging agents that can detect necrotic tissue have great clinical potential. We demonstrate here that a small molecule, termed Hoechst-IR, composed of the DNA binding dye Hoechst and the near-infrared dye IR-786, can image necrotic tissue in vivo via fluorescence imaging. Hoechst-IR detects necrosis by binding extracellular DNA released from necrotic cells and was able to image necrosis generated from a myocardial infarction and lipopolysaccharide/d-galactosamine (LPS-GalN) induced sepsis.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20597468 PMCID: PMC2929653 DOI: 10.1021/ol100923d
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Org Lett ISSN: 1523-7052 Impact factor: 6.005