A Bright, Renal-Clearable NIR-II Brush Macromolecular Probe with Long Blood Circulation Time for Kidney Disease Bioimaging.

2021 
Early detection of kidney disease is of vital importance due to their current prevalence worldwide. Fluorescence imaging, especially in the second near-infrared window (NIR-II) has been regarded as a promising technique for the early diagnosis of kidney disease due to the superior resolution and sensitivity. However, the reported NIR-II organic renal-clearable probes are hampered by their low brightness (e max Φ f>1000 nm 1000 nm ~ 60 M -1 cm -1 ), which is about 10-fold higher than that of previously reported NIR-II renal-clearable probes. FBP 912 exhibits an average diameter of ~ 4 nm and high renal clearance efficiency (~65% excretion through the kidney within 12 h), showing superior performance for non-invasively diagnosis of renal ischemia-reperfusion injury (RIR) earlier than clinical serum-based protocols. Additionally, the high molecular weight polymer brush enables FBP 912 with prolonged circulation time ( t 1/2 ~ 6.1 h) and higher brightness than traditional PEGylated renal-clearable control fluorophores ( t 1/2 < 2 h), facilitating for 4T1 tumor passive targeted imaging and renal cell carcinoma active targeted imaging with higher signal-to-noise ratio and extended retention time.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    0
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []