RESUMO
Advancement of bioorthogonal chemistry in molecular optical imaging lies in expanding the repertoire of fluorophores that can undergo fluorescence signal changes upon bioorthogonal ligation. However, most available bioorthogonally activatable fluorophores only emit shallow tissue-penetrating visible light via an intramolecular charge transfer mechanism. Herein, we report a serendipitous "torsion-induced disaggregation (TIDA)" phenomenon in the design of near-infrared (NIR) tetrazine (Tz)-based cyanine probe. The TIDA of the cyanine is triggered upon Tz-transcyclooctene ligation, converting its heptamethine chain from S-trans to S-cis conformation. Thus, after bioorthogonal reaction, the tendency of the resulting cyanine towards aggregation is reduced, leading to TIDA-induced fluorescence enhancement response. This Tz-cyanine probe sensitively delineates the tumor in living mice as early as 5 min post intravenous injection. As such, this work discovers a design mechanism for the construction of bioorthogonally activatable NIR fluorophores and opens up opportunities to further exploit bioorthogonal chemistry in in vivo imaging.
Assuntos
Neoplasias , Imagem Óptica , Animais , Corantes Fluorescentes/química , Camundongos , Neoplasias/diagnóstico por imagem , Imagem Óptica/métodosRESUMO
Tumor tissue imaging and drug release imaging are both crucial for tumor imaging and image-guided drug delivery. It is urgent to develop a multileveled tumor imaging platform to realize the multiple imaging applications. In this work, we synthesized an albumin-based fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) probe Cy5/7@HSA NPs containing two near-infrared cyanine dyes (CyBI5 and CyBI7) with high FRET efficiency (97 %). Excellent brightness and efficient FRET inside Cy5/7@HSA NPs enabled high-sensitive cell imaging and tumor imaging. This unique nanoprobe imaged 4T1 tumor-bearing mice with high sensitivity (TBR = 5.2) at 24 h post-injection and the dyes penetrated the tumor interior around 4 h post-injection. The release of dyes from nanoprobes was also tracked. This result shows the strong potential of this albumin-based FRET nanoprobe as multileveled tumor imaging platform for in vivo tumor imaging, drug delivery and image-guided surgery.