X-ray-activated persistent luminescence nanomaterials for NIR-II imaging.
Peng PeiYing ChenCaixia SunYong FanYanmin YangXuan LiuLingfei LuMengyao ZhaoHongxin ZhangDongyuan ZhaoXiaogang LiuFan ZhangPublished in: Nature nanotechnology (2021)
Persistent luminescence is not affected by background autofluorescence, and thus holds the promise of high-contrast bioimaging. However, at present, persistent luminescent materials for in vivo imaging are mainly bulk crystals characterized by a non-uniform size and morphology, inaccessible core-shell structures and short emission wavelengths. Here we report a series of X-ray-activated, lanthanide-doped nanoparticles with an extended emission lifetime in the second near-infrared window (NIR-II, 1,000-1,700 nm). Core-shell engineering enables a tunable NIR-II persistent luminescence, which outperforms NIR-II fluorescence in signal-to-noise ratios and the accuracy of in vivo multiplexed encoding and multilevel encryption, as well as in resolving mouse abdominal vessels, tumours and ureters in deep tissue (~2-4 mm), with up to fourfold higher signal-to-noise ratios and a threefold greater sharpness. These rationally designed nanoparticles also allow the high-contrast multiplexed imaging of viscera and multimodal NIR-II persistent luminescence-magnetic resonance-positron emission tomography imaging of murine tumours.
Keyphrases
- high resolution
- quantum dots
- energy transfer
- magnetic resonance
- photodynamic therapy
- fluorescence imaging
- fluorescent probe
- positron emission tomography
- drug release
- computed tomography
- light emitting
- living cells
- contrast enhanced
- sensitive detection
- big data
- metal organic framework
- ionic liquid
- deep learning
- highly efficient