A stable and biocompatible shortwave infrared nanoribbon for dual-channel in vivo imaging
Cheng Yao, Ruwei Wei, Xiao Luo, Jie Zhou, Xiaodong Zhang, Xicun Lu, Yan Dong, Ruofan Chu, Yuxin Sun, Yu Wang, Wencheng Xia, Da‐Hui Qu, Cong Liu, Junfeng Ren, Guang‐Bo Ge, Jinquan Chen, Xuhong Qian, Youjun Yang
Abstract
The shortwave infrared (SWIR) region is an ideal spectral window for next-generation bioimaging to harness improved penetration and reduced phototoxicity. SWIR spectral activity may also be accessed via supramolecular dye aggregation. Unfortunately, development of dye aggregation remains challenging. We propose a crystal-aided aggregate synthesis (CAASH) approach to introduce a layer of rationality for the development of J-aggregate and the successful development of a water-soluble SWIR JV-aggregate with a bisbenzannulated silicon rhodamine scaffold (ESi5). The resulting SWIR-aggregates exhibit excellent stabilities toward organic solvents, pH, sonication, photobleaching, thiols, and endogenous oxidative species. Notably, the aggregates have a high structure-dependent melting temperature of ca. 330-335 K. In fact, the heating/annealing process can be exploited to reduce aggregation disorder. The aggregates are biocompatible and have broad potential in in vivo fluorescence and photoacoustic imaging and more. While the shortwave infrared (SWIR) region has potential for bioimaging applications, stable and biocompatible SWIR absorbers/emitters are challenging to access. Here, the authors report the approach of crystal-aided aggregate synthesis for the development of J-aggregates for in vivo bioimaging.