Stable, Bright, and Long-Fluorescence-Lifetime Dyes for Deep-Near-Infrared Bioimaging.
Jin LiYan DongRuwei WeiGuanyu JiangCheng YaoMeng LvYuyang WuSarah H GardnerFeng ZhangMelissa Y LuceroJian HuangHao ChenGuangbo GeJefferson Y ChanJinquan ChenHaitao SunXiao LuoXuhong QianYoujun YangPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2022)
Near-infrared (NIR) fluorophores absorbing maximally in the region beyond 800 nm, i.e., deep-NIR spectral region, are actively sought for biomedical applications. Ideal dyes are bright, nontoxic, photostable, biocompatible, and easily derivatized to introduce functionalities (e.g., for bioconjugation or aqueous solubility). The rational design of such fluorophores remains a major challenge. Silicon-substituted rhodamines have been successful for bioimaging applications in the red spectral region. The longer-wavelength silicon-substituted congeners for the deep-NIR spectral region are unknown to date. We successfully prepared four silicon-substituted bis-benzannulated rhodamine dyes ( ESi5a-ESi5d ), with an efficient five-step cascade on a gram-scale. Because of the extensive overlapping of their HOMO-LUMO orbitals, ESi5a-ESi5d are highly absorbing (λ abs ≈ 865 nm and ε > 10 5 cm -1 M -1 ). By restraining both the rotational freedom via annulation and the vibrational freedom via silicon-imparted strain, the fluorochromic scaffold of ESi5 is highly rigid, resulting in an unusually long fluorescence lifetime (τ > 700 ps in CH 2 Cl 2 ) and a high fluorescence quantum yield (ϕ = 0.14 in CH 2 Cl 2 ). Their half-lives toward photobleaching are 2 orders of magnitude longer than the current standard (ICG in serum). They are stable in the presence of biorelevant concentration of nucleophiles or reactive oxygen species. They are minimally toxic and readily metabolized. Upon tail vein injection of ESi5a (as an example), the vasculature of a nude mouse was imaged with a high signal-to-background ratio. ESi5 dyes have broad potentials for bioimaging in the deep-NIR spectral region.
Keyphrases
- ms ms
- fluorescent probe
- photodynamic therapy
- living cells
- optical coherence tomography
- fluorescence imaging
- drug release
- energy transfer
- single molecule
- molecular docking
- ionic liquid
- reactive oxygen species
- density functional theory
- dual energy
- computed tomography
- room temperature
- aqueous solution
- magnetic resonance
- molecular dynamics simulations
- molecular dynamics
- contrast enhanced