Journal of Nanobiotechnology (Aug 2024)

In vivo fluorescence imaging of nanocarriers in near-infrared window II based on aggregation-caused quenching

  • Zichen Zhang,
  • Chang Liu,
  • Yi Lu,
  • Weili Zhao,
  • Quangang Zhu,
  • Haisheng He,
  • Zhongjian Chen,
  • Wei Wu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12951-024-02761-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 1
pp. 1 – 16

Abstract

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Abstract Accurate fluorescence imaging of nanocarriers in vivo remains a challenge owing to interference derived mainly from biological tissues and free probes. To address both issues, the current study explored fluorophores in the near-infrared (NIR)-II window with aggregation-caused quenching (ACQ) properties to improve imaging accuracy. Candidate fluorophores with NIR-II emission, ACQ984 (λ em = 984 nm) and IR-1060 (λ em = 1060 nm), from the aza-BODIPY and cyanine families, respectively, were compared with the commercial fluorophore ICG with NIR-II tail emission and the NIR-I fluorophore P2 from the aza-BODIPY family. ACQ984 demonstrates high water sensitivity with complete fluorescence quenching at a water fraction greater than 50%. Physically embedding the fluorophores illuminates various nanocarriers, while free fluorophores cause negligible interference owing to the ACQ effect. Imaging based on ACQ984 revealed fine structures in the vascular system at high resolution. Moreover, good in vivo and ex vivo correlations in the monitoring of blood nanocarriers can be established, enabling real-time noninvasive in situ investigation of blood pharmacokinetics and dynamic distribution in various tissues. IR-1060 also has a good ACQ effect, but the lack of sufficient photostability and steady post-labeling fluorescence undermines its potential for nanocarrier bioimaging. P2 has an excellent ACQ effect, but its NIR-I emission only provides nondiscriminative ambiguous images. The failure of the non-ACQ probe ICG to display the biodistribution details serves as counterevidence for the improved imaging accuracy by NIR-II ACQ probes. Taken together, it is concluded that fluorescence imaging of nanocarriers based on NIR-II ACQ probes enables accurate in vivo bioimaging and real-time in situ pharmacokinetic analysis.

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