This study represents
a successful approach toward employing polycaprolactone–polyamidoamine
(PCL–PAMAM) linear dendritic block copolymer (LDBC) nanoparticles
as small-molecule carriers in NIR imaging and photothermal therapy.
A feasible and robust synthetic strategy was used to synthesize a
library of amphiphilic LDBCs with well-controlled hydrophobic-to-hydrophilic
weight ratios. Systems with a hydrophobic weight ratio higher than
70% formed nanoparticles in aqueous media, which show hydrodynamic
diameters of 51.6 and 96.4 nm. These nanoparticles exhibited loading
efficiencies up to 21% for a hydrophobic molecule and 64% for a hydrophilic
molecule. Furthermore, successful cellular uptake was observed via
trafficking into endosomal and lysosomal compartments with an encapsulated
NIR theranostic agent (C3) without inducing cell death. A preliminary
photothermal assessment resulted in cell death after treating the
cells with encapsulated C3 and exposing them to NIR light. The results
of this work confirm the potential of these polymeric materials as
promising candidates in theranostic nanomedicine.
Molecular
engineering strategies designed to red-shift cyanine dye absorptions
and emissions further into the near-infrared (NIR) spectral region
are explored. Through the use of a novel donor group, indolizine,
with varying cyanine bridge lengths, dye absorptions and emissions,
were shifted deeper into the NIR region than common indoline-cyanines.
Stokes shifts resulting from intramolecular steric interactions of
up to ∼60 nm in many cases were observed and explained computationally.
Molecular brightnesses of up to 5800 deep into the NIR region were
observed. Structure–property relationships are explored for
the six indolizine-cyanine dyes with varying cyanine bridge length
and indolizine substituents showing broad absorption and emission
tunability. The dyes are characterized by crystallography, and the
photophysical properties are probed by varying solvent for absorption
and emission studies. Computational data show involvement of the entire
indolizine π-system during light absorption, which suggests
these systems can be tunable even further into the NIR region through
select derivatizations.
A NIR II emissive
dye was synthesized by the C–H bond functionalization
of 1-methyl-2-phenylindolizine with 3,6-dibromoxanthene. The rhodindolizine
(RhIndz) spirolactone product was nonfluorescent; however,
upon opening of the lactone ring by the formation of the ethyl ester
derivative, the fluorophore absorbs at 920 nm and emits at 1092 nm,
which are both in the NIR II region. In addition, 4-cyanophenyl- (CNRhIndz) and 4-methoxyphenyl-substituted rhodindolizine (MeORhIndz) could also be prepared by the C–H activation
reaction.
Organic dyes that absorb and emit in the near-infrared (NIR) region are potentially noninvasive, high-resolution, and rapid biological imaging materials. Indolizine donor-based cyanine and squaraine dyes with water-solubilizing sulfonate groups were targeted in this study due to strong absorptions and emissions in the NIR region. As previously observed for nonwater-soluble derivatives, the indolizine group with water-solubilizing groups retains a substantial shift toward longer wavelengths for both absorption and emission with squaraines and cyanines relative to classically researched indoline donor analogues. Very high quantum yields (as much as 58%) have been observed with absorption and emission >700 nm in fetal bovine serum. Photostability studies, cell culture cytotoxicity, and cell uptake specificity profiles were all studied for these dyes, demonstrating exceptional biological imaging suitability.
The development of deep red and near infrared emissive materials with high quantum yields is an important challenge. Several classes of squaraine dyes have demonstrated high quantum yields, but require significantly red-shifted absorptions to access the NIR window. Additionally, squaraine dyes have typically shown narrow Stokes shifts, which limits their use in living biological imaging applications due to dye emission interference with the light source. Through the incorporation of indolizine heterocycles we have synthesized novel indolizine squaraine dyes with increased Stokes shifts (up to >0.119 eV, >50 nm increase) and absorptions substantially further into the NIR region than an indoline squaraine benchmark (726 nm versus 659 nm absorption maxima). These materials have shown significantly enhanced water solubility, which is unique for squaraine dyes without water-solubilizing substituents. Absorption, electrochemical, computational, and fluorescence studies were undertaken and exceptional fluorescence quantum yields of up 12 % were observed with emission curves extending beyond 850 nm.
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