Xia Liu, Ben Shi, Yue Gao, Shitai Zhu, Qinglong Yan, Xiaoguo Liu, Jiye Shi, Qian Li, Lihua Wang, Jiang Li, Chunchang Zhao, He Tian, Itamar Willner, Ying Zhu, Chunhai Fan
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Cancer imaging approaching single-cell levels is highly desirable for studying in vivo cell migration and cancer metastasis. However, current imaging probes struggle to simultaneously achieve high sensitivity, deep-tissue penetration and tissue specificity. Here we report size- and shape-resolved fluorescent DNA framework (FDF) dots with tail emission in the second near-infrared window (1,000–1,700 nm, NIR-II), which enable near-single-cell-level, tumour-targeting deep-tissue (~1 cm) NIR-II imaging in tumour-bearing mouse models. The construction of DNA frameworks with embedded hydrophobic nanocavity results in the non-covalent encapsulation of a designed NIR-Ib (900–1,000 nm) probe (dye Sq964). The FDF dots exhibit high water solubility, brightness and photostability. We find that the stable tumour retention of FDF dots with enhanced signal intensity arises from their shape-dependent accumulation in tumour cells. FDF-dot-based cancer imaging reveals in vivo sensitivity down to ~40 tumour cells, high tumour-to-normal tissue ratios up to ~26 and long-term imaging over 11 days. We also demonstrate NIR-II-image-guided breast cancer surgery with the complete excision of metastases with a minimum size of ~53 μm (~20 cells).
期刊介绍:
Nature Photonics is a monthly journal dedicated to the scientific study and application of light, known as Photonics. It publishes top-quality, peer-reviewed research across all areas of light generation, manipulation, and detection.
The journal encompasses research into the fundamental properties of light and its interactions with matter, as well as the latest developments in optoelectronic devices and emerging photonics applications. Topics covered include lasers, LEDs, imaging, detectors, optoelectronic devices, quantum optics, biophotonics, optical data storage, spectroscopy, fiber optics, solar energy, displays, terahertz technology, nonlinear optics, plasmonics, nanophotonics, and X-rays.
In addition to research papers and review articles summarizing scientific findings in optoelectronics, Nature Photonics also features News and Views pieces and research highlights. It uniquely includes articles on the business aspects of the industry, such as technology commercialization and market analysis, offering a comprehensive perspective on the field.