A high quantum yield molecule-protein complex fluorophore for near-infrared II imaging

Alexander L. Antaris(Stanford University), Hao Chen(Wuhan University), Shuo Diao(Stanford University), Zhuoran Ma(Stanford University), Zhe Zhang(Stanford University), Shoujun Zhu(Stanford University), Joy Wang(Stanford University), Alexander X. Lozano(Stanford University), Quli Fan(Stanford University), Leila Chew(Stanford University), Mark Zhu(Stanford University), Kai Cheng(Stanford University), Xuechuan Hong(Wuhan University), Hongjie Dai(Stanford University), Zhen Cheng(Stanford University)
Nature Communications
May 19, 2017
Cited by 611Open Access
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Abstract

Fluorescence imaging in the second near-infrared window (NIR-II) allows visualization of deep anatomical features with an unprecedented degree of clarity. NIR-II fluorophores draw from a broad spectrum of materials spanning semiconducting nanomaterials to organic molecular dyes, yet unfortunately all water-soluble organic molecules with >1,000 nm emission suffer from low quantum yields that have limited temporal resolution and penetration depth. Here, we report tailoring the supramolecular assemblies of protein complexes with a sulfonated NIR-II organic dye (CH-4T) to produce a brilliant 110-fold increase in fluorescence, resulting in the highest quantum yield molecular fluorophore thus far. The bright molecular complex allowed for the fastest video-rate imaging in the second NIR window with ∼50-fold reduced exposure times at a fast 50 frames-per-second (FPS) capable of resolving mouse cardiac cycles. In addition, we demonstrate that the NIR-II molecular complexes are superior to clinically approved ICG for lymph node imaging deep within the mouse body.


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