Enhancing NIR-II Phosphorescence through Phosphorescence Resonance Energy Transfer for Tumor-Hypoxia Imaging

Phosphorescence probes have emerged as a promising hypoxia detector for their excellent characters of long luminescence lifetime, large Stokes shift, and oxygen sensitivity. However, the low quantum yields of organic phosphorescence probes in the second near-infrared wavelength window (NIR-II, 1000–...

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Veröffentlicht in:ACS materials letters 2023-01, Vol.5 (1), p.116-124
Hauptverfasser: Zhang, Wansu, Chen, Shangyu, Ye, Shuai, Sun, Pengfei, Fan, Quli, Song, Jun, Zeng, Pengju, Qu, Jun-Le, Wong, Wai-Yeung
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Phosphorescence probes have emerged as a promising hypoxia detector for their excellent characters of long luminescence lifetime, large Stokes shift, and oxygen sensitivity. However, the low quantum yields of organic phosphorescence probes in the second near-infrared wavelength window (NIR-II, 1000–1700 nm) hinder their further development of NIR-II hypoxia imaging. Herein, this study reports a new NIR-II phosphorescence probe (PRET NPs) containing a phosphorescent long-lived triplet energy donor (PD) and a NIR-II fluorescent energy acceptor (FA) by using phosphorescence resonance energy transfer (PRET) strategy. Because of the suitable spectral overlap of PD and FA, PRET NPs exhibit high NIR-II quantum yield in both normoxic and oxygen-free atmospheres. Based on that, in the in vivo tumor hypoxia imaging experiments, PRET NPs also exhibit high brightness and signal-to-background ratio (SBR) of NIR-II tumor-hypoxia imaging. Therefore, this study illustrates a general approach based on “PRET” strategy to develop bright NIR-II phosphorescent probes.
ISSN:2639-4979
2639-4979
DOI:10.1021/acsmaterialslett.2c01033