Steric protection of near-infrared fluorescent dyes for enhanced bioimaging.
Sai Shradha Reddy KommidiKirk M AtkinsonBradley D SmithPublished in: Journal of materials chemistry. B (2024)
Near-fluorescent (NIR) dyes that absorb and emit light in the wavelength range of 650-1700 nm are well-suited for bioimaging due to the improved image contrast and increased penetration of the long-wavelength light through biological tissue. However, the imaging performance of NIR fluorescent dyes is limited by several inherent photophysical and physicochemical properties including, low fluorescence quantum yield, high chemical and photochemical reactivity, propensity to self-aggregate in water, non-specific association with off-target biological sites, and non-optimal pharmacokinetic profiles in living subjects. In principle, all these drawbacks can be alleviated by steric protection which is a structural process that surrounds the fluorophore with bulky groups that block undesired intermolecular interactions. The literature methods to sterically protect a long-wavelength dye can be separated into two general strategies, non-covalent dye encapsulation and covalent steric appendage. Illustrative examples of each method show how steric protection improves bioimaging performance by providing: (a) increased fluorescence brightness, (b) higher fluorophore ground state stability, (c) decreased photobleaching, and (d) superior pharmacokinetic profile. Some sterically protected dyes are commercially available and further success with future systems will require experts in chemistry, microscopy, cell biology, medical imaging, and clinical medicine to work closely as interdisciplinary teams.
Keyphrases
- fluorescent probe
- living cells
- quantum dots
- aqueous solution
- energy transfer
- single molecule
- high resolution
- photodynamic therapy
- healthcare
- systematic review
- single cell
- magnetic resonance
- fluorescence imaging
- label free
- cell therapy
- highly efficient
- magnetic resonance imaging
- mesenchymal stem cells
- molecular dynamics
- current status
- mass spectrometry
- computed tomography
- machine learning
- optical coherence tomography
- stem cells
- contrast enhanced
- drug delivery