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Chemigenetic Far-Red Labels and Ca 2+ Indicators Optimized for Photoacoustic Imaging.

Alexander CookNikita KaydanovBegoña Ugarte-UribeJuan Carlos BoffiGretel B KammRobert PrevedelClaire Deo
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2024)
Photoacoustic imaging is an emerging modality with significant promise for biomedical applications such as neuroimaging, owing to its capability to capture large fields of view deep inside complex scattering tissue. However, widespread adoption of this technique has been hindered by a lack of suitable molecular reporters for this modality. In this work, we introduce chemigenetic labels and calcium sensors specifically tailored for photoacoustic imaging, using a combination of synthetic dyes and HaloTag-based self-labeling proteins. We rationally design and engineer far-red "acoustogenic" dyes, showing high photoacoustic turn-ons upon binding to HaloTag, and develop a suite of tunable calcium indicators based on these scaffolds. These first-generation photoacoustic reporters show excellent performance in tissue-mimicking phantoms, with the best variants outperforming existing sensors in terms of signal intensity, sensitivity, and photostability. We demonstrate the application of these ligands for labeling HaloTag-expressing neurons in mouse brain tissue, producing strong, specifically targeted photoacoustic signal, and provide a first example of in vivo labeling with these chemigenetic photoacoustic probes. Together, this work establishes a new approach for the design of photoacoustic reporters, paving the way toward deep tissue functional imaging.
Keyphrases
  • fluorescence imaging
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  • photodynamic therapy
  • small molecule
  • gene expression
  • spinal cord injury
  • machine learning
  • dna methylation
  • low cost
  • cancer therapy
  • electronic health record
  • fluorescent probe