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Joo, Jinmyoung
Laboratory for Advanced Biomaterials and Translational Medicine
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In vivo time-gated fluorescence imaging with biodegradable luminescent porous silicon nanoparticles

Author(s)
Gu, LuoHall, David J.Qin, ZhengtaoAnglin, EmilyJoo, JinmyoungMooney, David J.Howell, Stephen B.Sailor, Michael J.
Issued Date
2013-08
DOI
10.1038/ncomms3326
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/25698
Fulltext
https://www.nature.com/articles/ncomms3326
Citation
NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, v.4, pp.2326
Abstract
Fluorescence imaging is one of the most versatile and widely used visualization methods in biomedical research. However, tissue autofluorescence is a major obstacle confounding interpretation of in vivo fluorescence images. The unusually long emission lifetime (5-13 mu s) of photoluminescent porous silicon nanoparticles can allow the time-gated imaging of tissues in vivo, completely eliminating shorter-lived (<10 ns) emission signals from organic chromophores or tissue autofluorescence. Here using a conventional animal imaging system not optimized for such long-lived excited states, we demonstrate improvement of signal to background contrast ratio by 450-fold in vitro and by 420-fold in vivo when imaging porous silicon nanoparticles. Time-gated imaging of porous silicon nanoparticles accumulated in a human ovarian cancer xenograft following intravenous injection is demonstrated in a live mouse. The potential for multiplexing of images in the time domain by using separate porous silicon nanoparticles engineered with different excited state lifetimes is discussed.
Publisher
NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
ISSN
2041-1723
Keyword
MESOPOROUS SILICONLIFETIME CONTRASTCANCER-THERAPYQUANTUM DOTSDELIVERYDIAGNOSISTUMORSMICROPARTICLESFLUOROPHORESTISSUES

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