Endogenous H2S-Activated Orthogonal Second Near-Infrared Emissive Nanoprobe for In Situ Ratiometric Fluorescence Imaging of Metformin-Induced Liver Injury.
Zhiming DengShenghui BiMingyang JiangSongjun ZengPublished in: ACS nano (2021)
Metformin as a hypoglycemic drug for antidiabetic treatment has emerged as a multipotential drug for many disease treatments such as cognitive disorders, cancers, promoting weight loss. However, overdose uptake may upregulate the hepatic H2S level, subsequently leading to serious liver injury and toxicity. Therefore, developing intelligent second near-infrared (NIR-II) emitting nanoprobes by using endogenous H2S as a smart trigger for noninvasive highly specific in situ monitoring of the metformin-induced hepatotoxicity is highly desirable, which is rarely explored. Herein, an endogenous H2S activated orthogonal NIR-II emitting myrica rubra-like nanoprobe based on NaYF4:Gd/Yb/Er@NaYF4:Yb@SiO2 coated with Ag nanodots was explored for highly specific in vivo ratiometrically monitoring of hepatotoxicity. The designed nanoprobes were mainly uptaken by the liver and subsequently converted to NaYF4:Gd/Yb/Er@NaYF4:Yb@SiO2@Ag2S via in situ sulfuration reaction triggered by the overexpressed endogenous H2S in the injured liver tissues, finally leading to a turn-on orthogonal emission centered at 1053 nm (irradiation by 808 nm laser) and 1525 nm (irradiation by 980 nm laser). The designed nanoprobe presents a high detection limit down to 0.7 nM of H2S. More importantly, the in situ highly specific ratiometric imaging of the metformin-induced hepatotoxicity was successfully achieved by using the activatable orthogonal NIR-II emitting probe. Our results provide an NIR-II ratiometric fluorescence imaging strategy for highly sensitive/specific diagnosis of hepatotoxicity levels induced by metformin.
Keyphrases
- fluorescence imaging
- fluorescent probe
- drug induced
- living cells
- photodynamic therapy
- liver injury
- quantum dots
- energy transfer
- weight loss
- sensitive detection
- light emitting
- high resolution
- adverse drug
- gene expression
- bariatric surgery
- nitric oxide
- high glucose
- emergency department
- breast cancer cells
- drug delivery
- type diabetes
- high speed
- radiation therapy
- mass spectrometry
- simultaneous determination
- oxidative stress
- replacement therapy