| Literature DB >> 35910747 |
Jie Lian1, Yipeng Wang2,3, Xiaomeng Sun2,3, Quanshi Shi4, Fanda Meng2,3.
Abstract
Bioimaging techniques are of increasing importance in clinical and related fields, which also have been successfully applied in the in vivo/in vitro imaging system. Due to the vital factor of enzymes in biological systems, enzyme-activated fluorophores, which could turn "on" the fluorescence signal from an "off" state, offer non-invasive and effective potential for the accurate bioimaging of particular cells, tissues, or bacteria. Comparing with the traditional imaging probes, enzyme-activated organic small fluorophores can visualize living cells within small animals with high sensitivity, high imaging resolution, non-invasiveness, and real-time feedback. In this mini review, well-designed enzyme-activated organic fluorescent probes with multiple functions are exclusively reviewed through the latest development and progress, focusing on probe design strategy, fluorescence property, enzyme activation process, and bioimaging applications. It is worth noting that multi-enzyme-activated strategies, which could avoid the production of "false-positive" signals in complex biological systems, effectively provide high selective and real-time bioimaging, indicating the exciting potential of intraoperative fluorescence imaging and diagnosis tools.Entities:
Keywords: AIE fluorophore; enzyme-activated fluorophore; high selectivity; multifunction; real-time imaging
Year: 2022 PMID: 35910747 PMCID: PMC9326025 DOI: 10.3389/fchem.2022.935586
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Chem ISSN: 2296-2646 Impact factor: 5.545
FIGURE 1Structures of some bioimaging probes activated with single enzyme.
FIGURE 2Design strategy and application of multifunction enzyme-activated probes with single enzyme. (A) Design of GGT-activated self-immobilizing fluorophore and its real-time imaging in mice [adapted with permission from Li et al. (2020b) Copyright © 2020, American Chemical Society]. (B) Design of Casp3-activatable cell-permeable fluorophore and its application on apoptosis imaging in HeLa cells [adapted with permission from Jin et al. (2021) Copyright © 2021, American Chemical Society]. (C) Design of dual-modal imaging probe and its application on imaging-guided surgery in mice [adapted with permission from Zeng et al. (2020) Copyright © 2020, American Chemical Society].
FIGURE 3Scheme of the multi-enzyme-activated probe design strategy. (A) CDG-DNB3 and (B) AND-gate imaging probe.