Gold Nanoclusters for NIR‐II Fluorescence Imaging of Bones

Deling Li(Capital Medical University), Qiang Liu(Southwest Minzu University), Qingrong Qi(Sichuan University), Hui Shi(Stanford Medicine), En‐Chi Hsu(Stanford University), Weiyu Chen(Stanford Medicine), Wen‐Li Yuan(Stanford Medicine), Yifan Wu(Stanford Medicine), Sien Lin(Palo Alto University), Yitian Zeng(Palo Alto University), Zunyu Xiao(Stanford Medicine), Lingyun Xu(Stanford Medicine), Yanrong Zhang(Palo Alto University), Tanya Stoyanova(Stanford University), Wang Jia(Capital Medical University), Zhen Cheng(Stanford Medicine)
Small
September 30, 2020
Cited by 160

Abstract

Abstract Fluorescence imaging in the second near‐infrared window (NIR‐II, 1000–1700 nm) holds great promise for deep tissue visualization. Development of novel clinical translatable NIR‐II probes is crucial for realizing the medical applications of NIR‐II fluorescence imaging. Herein, the glutathione‐capped gold nanoclusters (AuNCs, specifically Au 25 (SG) 18 ) demonstrate highly efficient binding capability to hydroxyapatite in vitro for the first time. Further in vivo NIR‐II fluorescence imaging of AuNCs indicate that they accumulate in bone tissues with high contrast and signal‐background ratio. AuNCs are also mainly and quickly excreted from body through renal system, showing excellent ribs and thoracic vertebra imaging because of no background signal in liver and spleen. The deep tissue penetration capability and high resolution of AuNCs in NIR‐II imaging render their great potential for fluorescence‐guided surgery like spinal pedicle screw implantation. Overall, AuNCs are highly promising and clinical translatable NIR‐II imaging probe for visualizing bone and bone related abnormalities.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis