A bright organic NIR-II nanofluorophore for three-dimensional imaging into biological tissues.
Hao WanJingying YueShoujun ZhuTakaaki UnoXiaodong ZhangQinglai YangKuai YuGuosong HongJunying WangLulin LiZhuoran MaHongpeng GaoYeteng ZhongJessica SuAlexander L AntarisYan XiaJian LuoYongye LiangHongjie DaiPublished in: Nature communications (2018)
Fluorescence imaging of biological systems in the second near-infrared (NIR-II, 1000-1700 nm) window has shown promise of high spatial resolution, low background, and deep tissue penetration owing to low autofluorescence and suppressed scattering of long wavelength photons. Here we develop a bright organic nanofluorophore (named p-FE) for high-performance biological imaging in the NIR-II window. The bright NIR-II >1100 nm fluorescence emission from p-FE affords non-invasive in vivo tracking of blood flow in mouse brain vessels. Excitingly, p-FE enables one-photon based, three-dimensional (3D) confocal imaging of vasculatures in fixed mouse brain tissue with a layer-by-layer imaging depth up to ~1.3 mm and sub-10 µm high spatial resolution. We also perform in vivo two-color fluorescence imaging in the NIR-II window by utilizing p-FE as a vasculature imaging agent emitting between 1100 and 1300 nm and single-walled carbon nanotubes (CNTs) emitting above 1500 nm to highlight tumors in mice.