Tuning nanoparticle core composition drives orthogonal fluorescence amplification for enhanced tumour imaging.
Meijie PanRuiyang ZhaoChuanxun FuMingmei TangJiayi ZhouBin MaJianxiong LiuYe YangBinlong ChenQiang ZhangYiguang WangPublished in: Nature communications (2024)
Tumour detection with high selectivity and sensitivity is crucial for delineating tumour margins and identifying metastatic foci during image-guided surgery. Optical nanoprobes with preferential tumour accumulation is often limited by inefficient amplification of biological signals. Here, we report the design of a library of hydrophobic core-tunable ultra-pH-sensitive nanoprobes (HUNPs) for orthogonally amplifying tumour microenvironmental signals on multiple tumour models. We find that tuning the hydrophobicity of nanoparticle core composition with non-ionizable monomers can enhance cellular association of HUNPs by more than ten-fold, resulting in a high cellular internalization efficiency of HUNPs with up to 50% in tumours. Combining high tumour accumulation and high cell internalization efficiency, HUNPs show orthogonally amplified fluorescence signals, permitting the precise locating and delineating margins between malignant lesions and normal tissues with high contrast-to-noise ratio and resolution. Our study provides key strategies to design nanomedicines with high intracellular bioavailability for cancer detection, drug/gene delivery, and therapy.
Keyphrases
- high resolution
- squamous cell carcinoma
- gene expression
- magnetic resonance imaging
- emergency department
- stem cells
- single molecule
- fluorescence imaging
- computed tomography
- label free
- mesenchymal stem cells
- nucleic acid
- coronary artery disease
- real time pcr
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- cell therapy
- sensitive detection
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- childhood cancer