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Rational Engineering of Bioinspired Anthocyanidin Fluorophores with Excellent Two-Photon Properties for Sensing and Imaging.

Tianbing RenWang XuFangping JinDan ChengLili ZhangLin YuanXiao-Bing Zhang
Published in: Analytical chemistry (2017)
Fluorescent materials are widely employed in biological analysis owing to their biorthogonal chemistries for imaging and sensing purposes. However, it is always a challenge to design fluorophores with desired photophysical and biological properties, due to their complicated molecular and optical nature. Inspired by anthocyanidin, a class of flower pigments, we designed a new fluorescent molecular framework, AC-Fluor. The new fluorescent materials can be rationally engineered to produce a broad range of fluorescent scaffolds with flexibly tunable emission spectra covering the whole visible light range, from 467 to 707 nm. Furthermore, they exhibit unprecedented environment-insensitive two-photon properties with a substantial cross section as large as 1100 GM in aqueous solution. AC-Fluors demonstrate their biological values through two-photon deep tissue imaging, with penetration depths as much as 300 μm, while exhibiting minimal cytotoxicity. These features engender a rational engineering strategy for the design and optimization of new fluorescent materials for biological imaging.
Keyphrases
  • living cells
  • high resolution
  • quantum dots
  • fluorescent probe
  • label free
  • solid state