| Literature DB >> 30479757 |
Xin Bao1,2, Ye Yuan3, Jingqin Chen4, Bohan Zhang1,2, Di Li1, Ding Zhou1, Pengtao Jing1, Guiying Xu5, Yingli Wang5, Kateřina Holá6, Dezhen Shen1, Changfeng Wu3, Liang Song4,7, Chengbo Liu4, Radek Zbořil6, Songnan Qu1.
Abstract
Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30479757 PMCID: PMC6249234 DOI: 10.1038/s41377-018-0090-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Light Sci Appl ISSN: 2047-7538 Impact factor: 17.782
Fig. 1Morphology, composition, and structural characterization of the CDs.
a A TEM image of the CDs. The inset shows an HRTEM image of the corresponding CDs. b An AFM image. c EDS and XPS survey spectra of the CDs. Deconvolutions of high-resolution d C 1 s, e N 1 s, and f S 2p XPS spectra of the CDs
Fig. 2Photophysical and photothermal properties of the CDs.
a Absorption spectra of the CDs and a graphene oxide aqueous solution with the same mass concentration (200 μg mL−1). b Emission spectra of CDs that are excited at various wavelengths in dilute aqueous solution that were obtained using a Horiba Jobin Yvon Fluorolog-3 spectrometer with Xenon lamp excitation. c Photothermal images of CD aqueous solutions (200 μg mL−1) that were captured at various times under 655-nm laser irradiation at a power density of 1W cm−2. d Temperature evolutions of CD aqueous solutions of various concentrations, graphene oxide aqueous solution at 50 μg mL−1, and pure water under 655-nm laser irradiation at a power density of 1 W cm−2. e Temperature evolutions of CD aqueous solutions (50 μg mL−1) at various power densities. f Temperature curves of aqueous CD aqueous solution (200 μg mL−1) under five cycles of photothermal heating under 655-nm laser irradiation (1 W cm−2)
Fig. 3Cytotoxicity and biodistribution of the CDs.
a Relative cell viabilities of HeLa cells that were incubated with aqueous CD solution at various concentrations (0–1000 μg mL−1) for 24 h. b Confocal fluorescence images of HeLa cells that were incubated in PBS solution and aqueous CD solution (200 μg mL−1) after irradiation by the 655-nm laser at 1W cm−2 for 10 min; scale bar: 200 μm. c NIR fluorescence images of dissected major organs from mice without and with intravenous injection of aqueous CD solution (0.2 mL, 1000 μg mL−1) after various time points (left) and bright field and NIR fluorescence images of urine that was collected at the corresponding time points (right). The NIR fluorescence images were acquired using a Fluor Vivo Model-300 in vivo optical imaging system with xenon lamp excitation. The excitation wavelength was 639–713 nm and the fluorescence collection channels were 714–780 nm
Fig. 4Passive targeting of CDs in vivo.
a NIR fluorescence images of mouse bodies after intravenous injection of CDs (0.2 mL, 1000 μg mL−1) at various time points. b NIR fluorescence of H22 tumors that were dissected from mice at various postinjection time points. c NIR fluorescence of major organs and H22 tumors that were dissected from mice at 3 h postinjection. NIR fluorescence images of mouse bodies, major organs, and tumors that were acquired using an ORCA-Flash 4.0 V2 Digital CMOS camera, with excitation by 655-nm laser (10.6 mW cm−2) that was generated from MD-655NM-HS-2W-16060512. The emitted light was filtered through a 700-nm longpass filter that was coupled with a CMOS camera for NIR imaging. d PA MAP images and B-scan PA images of 4T1 tumors in mice after intravenous injection with CDs at various time points
Fig. 5Photothermal therapy via intravenous injection based on CDs.
a IR thermal images of mice with intravenous CDs injected at 10, 60, 120, 180, 240, and 300 s under irradiation at the tumor region by 655-nm laser at 1 W cm−2. b Temperature at mouse tumor sites as a function of the irradiation duration. c Photographs that document H22 tumor development on several days in live mice under various treatment conditions. d Tumor growth curves of H22 tumors in mice and survival rates of the groups after therapy. e Hematoxylin and eosin (H&E)-stained slices of heart, liver, spleen, lung, and kidney tissues of mice after PTT and control treatments. Scale bar: 50 μm