| Literature DB >> 30059201 |
Ji Qi1, Chaowei Sun2, Dongyu Li2, Hequn Zhang2, Wenbin Yu2, Abudureheman Zebibula3, Jacky W Y Lam1, Wang Xi4, Liang Zhu4, Fuhong Cai5, Peifa Wei1, Chunlei Zhu1, Ryan T K Kwok1, Lina L Streich6,7, Robert Prevedel6, Jun Qian2, Ben Zhong Tang1,8.
Abstract
Currently, a serious problem obstructing the large-scale clinical applications of fluorescence technique is the shallow penetration depth. Two-photon fluorescence microscopic imaging with excitation in the longer-wavelength near-infrared (NIR) region (>1100 nm) and emission in the NIR-I region (650-950 nm) is a good choice to realize deep-tissue and high-resolution imaging. Here, we report ultradeep two-photon fluorescence bioimaging with 1300 nm NIR-II excitation and NIR-I emission (peak ∼810 nm) based on a NIR aggregation-induced emission luminogen (AIEgen). The crab-shaped AIEgen possesses a planar core structure and several twisting phenyl/naphthyl rotators, affording both high fluorescence quantum yield and efficient two-photon activity. The organic AIE dots show high stability, good biocompatibility, and a large two-photon absorption cross section of 1.22 × 103 GM. Under 1300 nm NIR-II excitation, in vivo two-photon fluorescence microscopic imaging helps to reconstruct the 3D vasculature with a high spatial resolution of sub-3.5 μm beyond the white matter (>840 μm) and even to the hippocampus (>960 μm) and visualize small vessels of ∼5 μm as deep as 1065 μm in mouse brain, which is among the largest penetration depths and best spatial resolution of in vivo two-photon imaging. Rational comparison with the AIE dots manifests that two-photon imaging outperforms the one-photon mode for high-resolution deep imaging. This work will inspire more sight and insight into the development of efficient NIR fluorophores for deep-tissue biomedical imaging.Entities:
Keywords: NIR-II excitation; aggregation-induced emission; brain imaging; near-infrared; two-photon fluorescence imaging
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30059201 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.8b02452
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881