| Literature DB >> 28295935 |
Juanjuan Peng1,2, Animesh Samanta2, Xiao Zeng3, Sanyang Han3,4, Lu Wang3, Dongdong Su2, Daniel Teh Boon Loong5, Nam-Young Kang2, Sung-Jin Park2, Angelo Homayoun All4,6, Wenxuan Jiang4, Lin Yuan3,7, Xiaogang Liu3,8, Young-Tae Chang2,3.
Abstract
Drug toxicity is a long-standing concern of modern medicine. A typical anti-pain/fever drug paracetamol often causes hepatotoxicity due to peroxynitrite ONOO- . Conventional blood tests fail to offer real-time unambiguous visualization of such hepatotoxicity in vivo. Here we report a luminescent approach to evaluate acute hepatotoxicity in vivo by chromophore-conjugated upconversion nanoparticles. Upon injection, these nanoprobes mainly accumulate in the liver and the luminescence of nanoparticles remains suppressed owing to energy transfer to the chromophore. ONOO- can readily bleach the chromophore and thus recover the luminescence, the presence of ONOO- in the liver leads to fast restoring of the near-infrared emission. Taking advantages of the high tissue-penetration capability of near-infrared excitation/emission, these nanoprobes achieve real-time monitoring of hepatotoxicity in living animals, thereby providing a convenient screening strategy for assessing hepatotoxicity of synthetic drugs.Entities:
Keywords: biosensors; fluorescent probes; hepatotoxicity; nanotechnology; paracetamol
Year: 2017 PMID: 28295935 DOI: 10.1002/anie.201612020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ISSN: 1433-7851 Impact factor: 15.336