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A Dendron-Based Fluorescence Turn-On Probe for Tumor Detection.

Changren LiuLing'e ZhangSensen ZhouXiaoke ZhangWei WuXiqun Jiang
Published in: Chemistry (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2020)
Specifically amplifying the emission signals of optical probes in tumors is an effective way to improve the tumor-imaging sensitivity and contrast. In this paper, the first case of dendron-based fluorescence turn-on probes mediated by a Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) mechanism is reported. Dendrons up to the fourth generation with a hydrophilic oligo(ethylene glycol) scaffold are synthesized by a solid-phase synthesis strategy, and show precise and defect-free chemical structures. To construct the fluorescence turn-on probe, one Cy5.5 molecule is conjugated to the focal of a G3 dendron through a robust linkage and eight Black Hole Quencher 3 (BHQ-3) molecules are conjugated to its periphery through a PEG chain bearing a reductively cleavable disulfide linkage. By in vitro and in vivo experiments, it is demonstrated that the fluorescence of the dendron-based probe can be activated effectively and rapidly in the reductive environments of tumor cells and tissues, and the probe thus exhibits amplified tumor signals and weak normal tissue signals. Compared with the reported nanoscale turn-on probes, the dendron-based probe has several significant advantages, such as well-defined chemical structure, precisely controllable fluorophore/quencher conjugation sites and ratio, desirable chemical stability, and reproducible pharmacokinetic and pharmacological profiles, and is very promising in tumor detection.
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