| Literature DB >> 31832053 |
Hao Wan1, Huilong Ma2, Shoujun Zhu1, FeiFei Wang1, Ye Tian1, Rui Ma2, Qinglai Yang2, Zhubin Hu3, Tong Zhu4, Weizhi Wang1, Zhuoran Ma1, Mingxi Zhang1, Yeteng Zhong1, Haitao Sun3, Yongye Liang2, Hongjie Dai1.
Abstract
Fluorescence imaging in the second near-infrared (NIR-II) window holds impressive advantages of enhanced penetration depth and improved signal-to-noise ratio. Bright NIR-II fluorophores with renal excretion ability and low tissue accumulation are favorable for in vivo molecular imaging applications as they can render the target-mediated molecular imaging process easily distinguishable. Here, a probe (anti-PD-L1-BGP6) comprising a fluorophore (IR-BGP6) covalently bonded to the programmed cell death ligand-1 monoclonal antibody (PD-L1 mAb) for molecular imaging of immune checkpoint PD-L1 (a targeting site upregulated in various tumors for cancer imaging) in the NIR-II window is reported. Through molecular optimization, the bright NIR-II fluorophore IR-BGP6 with fast renal excretion (≈91% excretion in general through urine within the first 10 h postinjection) is developed. The conjugate anti-PD-L1-BGP6 succeeds in profiling PD-L1 expression and realizes efficient noninvasive molecular imaging in vivo, achieving a tumor to normal tissue (T/NT) signal ratio as high as ≈9.5. Compared with the NIR-II fluorophore with high nonspecific tissue accumulation, IR-BGP6 derived PD-L1 imaging significantly enhances the molecular imaging performance, serving as a strong tool for potentially studying underlying mechanism of immunotherapy. The work provides rationales to design renal-excreted NIR-II fluorophores and illustrate their advantages for in vivo molecular imaging.Entities:
Keywords: NIR-II fluorophore; PD-L1; molecular imaging; renal excretion
Year: 2018 PMID: 31832053 PMCID: PMC6907024 DOI: 10.1002/adfm.201804956
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Funct Mater ISSN: 1616-301X Impact factor: 18.808