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In vivo tumor-targeted dual-modal fluorescence/CT imaging using a nanoprobe co-loaded with an aggregation-induced emission dye and gold nanoparticles

  • Jimei Zhang
  • , Chan Li
  • , Xu Zhang
  • , Shuaidong Huo
  • , Shubin Jin
  • , Fei Fei An
  • , Xiaodan Wang
  • , Xiangdong Xue
  • , C. I. Okeke
  • , Guiyun Duan
  • , Fengguang Guo
  • , Xiaohong Zhang
  • , Jifu Hao
  • , Paul C. Wang
  • , Jinchao Zhang
  • , Xing Jie Liang
  • Taishan Medical University
  • National Center for Nanoscience and Technology
  • CAS - Technical Institute of Physics and Chemistry
  • Howard University
  • Hebei University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

180 Scopus citations

Abstract

As an intensely studied computed tomography (CT) contrast agent, gold nanoparticle has been suggested to be combined with fluorescence imaging modality to offset the low sensitivity of CT. However, the strong quenching of gold nanoparticle on fluorescent dyes requires complicated design and shielding to overcome. Herein, we report a unique nanoprobe (M-NPAPF-Au) co-loading an aggregation-induced emission (AIE) red dye and gold nanoparticles into DSPE-PEG2000 micelles for dual-modal fluorescence/CT imaging. The nanoprobe was prepared based on a facile method of "one-pot ultrasonic emulsification". Surprisingly, in the micelles system, fluorescence dye (NPAPF) efficiently overcame the strong fluorescence quenching of shielding-free gold nanoparticles and retained the crucial AIE feature. Invivo studies demonstrated the nanoprobe had superior tumor-targeting ability, excellent fluorescence and CT imaging effects. The totality of present studies clearly indicates the significant potential application of M-NPAPF-Au as a dual-modal non-invasive fluorescence/X-ray CT nanoprobe for invivo tumor-targeted imaging and diagnosis.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)103-111
Number of pages9
JournalBiomaterials
Volume42
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Feb 2015
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • AIE dye
  • Dual-modal imaging
  • Gold nanoparticles
  • Non-invasive fluorescence imaging
  • Tumor-targeting
  • X-ray computed tomography

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