Biomaterials Research (Oct 2022)

P800SO3-PEG: a renal clearable bone-targeted fluorophore for theranostic imaging

  • Haoran Wang,
  • Homan Kang,
  • Jason Dinh,
  • Shinya Yokomizo,
  • Wesley R. Stiles,
  • Molly Tully,
  • Kevin Cardenas,
  • Surbhi Srinivas,
  • Jason Ingerick,
  • Sung Ahn,
  • Kai Bao,
  • Hak Soo Choi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40824-022-00294-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract Background Due to the deep tissue penetration and reduced scattering, NIR-II fluorescence imaging is advantageous over conventional visible and NIR-I fluorescence imaging for the detection of bone growth, metabolism, metastasis, and other bone-related diseases. Methods Bone-targeted heptamethine cyanine fluorophores were synthesized by substituting the meso-carbon with a sulfur atom, resulting in a bathochromic shift and increased fluorescence intensity. The physicochemical, optical, and thermal stability of newly synthesized bone-targeted NIR fluorophores was performed in aqueous solvents. Calcium binding, bone-specific targeting, biodistribution, pharmacokinetics, and 2D and 3D NIR imaging were performed in animal models. Results The newly synthesized S-substituted heptamethine fluorophores demonstrated a high affinity for hydroxyapatite and calcium phosphate, which improved bone-specific targeting with signal-background ratios > 3.5. Particularly, P800SO3-PEG showed minimum nonspecific uptake, and most unbound molecules were excreted into the urinary bladder. Histological analyses demonstrated that P800SO3-PEG remained stable in the bone for over two weeks and was incorporated into bone matrices. Interestingly, the flexible thiol ethylene glycol linker on P800SO3-PEG induced a promising photothermal effect upon NIR laser irradiation, demonstrating potential theranostic imaging. Conclusions P800SO3-PEG shows a high affinity for bone tissues, deeper tissue imaging capabilities, minimum nonspecific uptake in the major organs, and photothermal effect upon laser irradiation, making it optimal for bone-targeted theranostic imaging.

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