| Literature DB >> 34112994 |
Peng Pei1, Ying Chen1, Caixia Sun1, Yong Fan2, Yanmin Yang3, Xuan Liu1, Lingfei Lu1, Mengyao Zhao1, Hongxin Zhang1, Dongyuan Zhao1, Xiaogang Liu4,5, Fan Zhang6.
Abstract
Persistent luminescence is not affected by background autofluorescence, and thus holds the promise of high-contrast bioimaging. However, at present, persistent luminescent materials for in vivo imaging are mainly bulk crystals characterized by a non-uniform size and morphology, inaccessible core-shell structures and short emission wavelengths. Here we report a series of X-ray-activated, lanthanide-doped nanoparticles with an extended emission lifetime in the second near-infrared window (NIR-II, 1,000-1,700 nm). Core-shell engineering enables a tunable NIR-II persistent luminescence, which outperforms NIR-II fluorescence in signal-to-noise ratios and the accuracy of in vivo multiplexed encoding and multilevel encryption, as well as in resolving mouse abdominal vessels, tumours and ureters in deep tissue (~2-4 mm), with up to fourfold higher signal-to-noise ratios and a threefold greater sharpness. These rationally designed nanoparticles also allow the high-contrast multiplexed imaging of viscera and multimodal NIR-II persistent luminescence-magnetic resonance-positron emission tomography imaging of murine tumours.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34112994 DOI: 10.1038/s41565-021-00922-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Nanotechnol ISSN: 1748-3387 Impact factor: 39.213