| Literature DB >> 31325079 |
A Yakovliev1, R Ziniuk1, D Wang1, B Xue1, L O Vretik2, O A Nikolaeva2, M Tan3, G Chen4, Yu L Slominskii5, J Qu6, T Y Ohulchanskyy7.
Abstract
Optical bioimaging with exogenous luminophores emitting in short-wave infrared spectral region (SWIR, ~ 1000-1700 nm) is a rapidly developing field, and the development of multiple SWIR-photoluminescent nanoprobes has recently been reported. In this regard, hyperspectral imaging (HSI), combined with unmixing algorithms, is a promising tool that can allow for efficient multiplexing of the SWIR-emitting nanoagents by their photoluminescence (PL) spectral profiles. The SWIR HSI technique reported here is developed to multiplex two types of nanoprobes: polymeric nanoparticles doped with organic dye (PNPs) and rare-earth doped fluoride nanoparticles (RENPs). Both types of nanoprobes exhibit PL in the same spectral range (~ 900-1200 nm), which hinders spectral separation of PL with optical filters and limits possibilities for their multiplexed imaging in biological tissues. By applying SWIR HSI, we exploited differences in the PL spectral profiles and achieved the spectrally selective and sensitive imaging of the PL signal from every type of nanoparticles. Unmixing of acquired data allowed for multiplexing of the spectrally overlapping nanoprobes by their PL profile. Both quantitative and spatial distribution for every type of nanoparticles were obtained from their mixed suspensions. Finally, the SWIR HSI technique with unmixing protocol was applied to in vivo imaging of mice subcutaneously injected with PNPs and RENPs. The applicability of hyperspectral techniques to multiplex nanoprobes in the in vivo imaging was successfully demonstrated.Entities:
Keywords: Fluorescence bioimaging; Hyperspectral imaging; Multiplexed nanoprobes; Photoluminescence; Short wavelength infrared
Year: 2019 PMID: 31325079 PMCID: PMC6642248 DOI: 10.1186/s11671-019-3068-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale Res Lett ISSN: 1556-276X Impact factor: 4.703
Fig. 1Scheme illustrating application of HSI for multiplexing photoluminescent nanoprobes
Fig. 3Characterization of PNPs and RENPs. TEM image (a) and schematic structure (b) of PNPs loaded with JB9-08 dye. TEM image (c) and schematic structure (d) of RENPs. e Normalized PL emission spectra of PNPs-JB9-08 and RENPs suspensions under 808 nm excitation. Scale bars, 100 nm
Fig. 2Schematic diagram of the NIR-SWIR hyperspectral imaging system
Fig. 4HSI of microcentrifuge tubes containing RENPs and PNPs. a Bright field image of microcentrifuge tubes with PNPs and RENPs suspended in PBS. b PL image of PNPs and RENPs samples excited with 808 nm (850-nm-long pass filter was used for image acquisition). c Scheme illustrating hypercube composed of HSI frames. d Spectral profiles of PNPs, RENPs, and background (BG) averaged from ROI shown in b as red, blue, and green squares, correspondingly. e Color maps of components abundances. f Reconstructed intensity images of the PL components and PL/bright field merged image
Fig. 5HSI of microcentrifuge tubes containing (left to right) RENPs, PNPs, and mixture of both. a Abundances of PNPs, RENPs, and background (BG). b Reconstructed PL intensity images and PL/bright field merged image
Fig. 6HSI of mouse subcutaneously injected with PNPs (top right injection site), RENPs (bottom right), and RENPs/PNPs mixture (left). a Bright field (SWIR), SWIR PL, and merged images acquired with 850-nm-long pass emission filter. b Abundances of PNPs, RENPs, and background (BG). c Corresponding reconstructed intensity images. d PL intensity images reconstructed from abundances with threshold level of 15% and PL/bright field merged image.