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A General Method To Increase Stokes Shift by Introducing Alternating Vibronic Structures.

Tian-Bing RenWang XuWei ZhangXing-Xing ZhangZhi-Yao WangZhen XiangLin YuanXiao-Bing Zhang
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2018)
Fluorescent dyes have enabled much progress in the broad range of biomedical fields. However, many commercially available dyes suffer from small Stokes shifts, resulting in poor signal-to-noise ratio and self-quenching on current microscope configurations. In this work, we have developed a general method to significantly increase the Stokes shifts of common fluorophores. By simply appending a 1,4-diethyl-decahydro-quinoxaline (DQ) moiety onto the conjugated structure, we introduced a vibronic backbone that could facilely expand the Stokes shifts, emission wavelength, and photostability of 11 different fluorophores by more than 3-fold. This generalizable method could significantly improve the imaging efficiency of commercial fluorophores. As a demonstration, we showed that the DQ derivative of hemicyanine generated 5-fold signal in mouse models over indocyanine green. Furthermore, the DQ-modified fluorophores could pair with their parent molecules to conduct one-excitation, multiple emission imaging, allowing us to study the cell behavior more robustly. This approach shows promise in generating dyes suitable for super-resolution microscopy and second window near-infrared imaging.
Keyphrases
  • high resolution
  • fluorescent probe
  • living cells
  • celiac disease
  • mouse model
  • machine learning
  • stem cells
  • optical coherence tomography
  • high speed
  • quantum dots
  • big data