M

Marcel P. Bruchez

Cleveland Clinic

ORCID: 0000-0002-7370-4848

Publishes on Advanced biosensing and bioanalysis techniques, Advanced Fluorescence Microscopy Techniques, Advanced Biosensing Techniques and Applications. 173 papers and 24.3k citations.

173Publications
24.3kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Semiconductor Nanocrystals as Fluorescent Biological Labels
Cited by 8.6k

Semiconductor nanocrystals were prepared for use as fluorescent probes in biological staining and diagnostics. Compared with conventional fluorophores, the nanocrystals have a narrow, tunable, symmetric emission spectrum and are photochemically stable. The advantages of the broad, continuous excitation spectrum were demonstrated in a dual-emission, single-excitation labeling experiment on mouse fibroblasts. These nanocrystal probes are thus complementary and in some cases may be superior to existing fluorophores.

Water-Soluble Quantum Dots for Multiphoton Fluorescence Imaging in Vivo
Cited by 2.3k

The use of semiconductor nanocrystals (quantum dots) as fluorescent labels for multiphoton microscopy enables multicolor imaging in demanding biological environments such as living tissue. We characterized water-soluble cadmium selenide-zinc sulfide quantum dots for multiphoton imaging in live animals. These fluorescent probes have two-photon action cross sections as high as 47,000 Goeppert-Mayer units, by far the largest of any label used in multiphoton microscopy. We visualized quantum dots dynamically through the skin of living mice, in capillaries hundreds of micrometers deep. We found no evidence of blinking (fluorescence intermittency) in solution on nanosecond to millisecond time scales.

Noninvasive Imaging of Quantum Dots in Mice
Byron Ballou, B. Christoffer Lagerholm, Lauren A. Ernst et al.|Bioconjugate Chemistry|2003
Cited by 1.1k

Quantum dots having four different surface coatings were tested for use in in vivo imaging. Localization was successfully monitored by fluorescence imaging of living animals, by necropsy, by frozen tissue sections for optical microscopy, and by electron microscopy, on scales ranging from centimeters to nanometers, using only quantum dots for detection. Circulating half-lives were found to be less than 12 min for amphiphilic poly(acrylic acid), short-chain (750 Da) methoxy-PEG or long-chain (3400 Da) carboxy-PEG quantum dots, but approximately 70 min for long-chain (5000 Da) methoxy-PEG quantum dots. Surface coatings also determined the in vivo localization of the quantum dots. Long-term experiments demonstrated that these quantum dots remain fluorescent after at least four months in vivo.