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Microfluidic oxygen tolerability screening of nanocarriers for triplet fusion photon upconversion

The full potential of triplet fusion photon upconversion (TF-UC) of providing high-energy photons locally with low-energy excitation is limited in biomedicine and life sciences by its oxygen sensitivity. This hampers the applicability of TF-UC systems in sensors, imaging, optogenetics and drug relea...

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Autores principales: Isokuortti, Jussi, Kiiski, Iiro, Sikanen, Tiina, Durandin, Nikita, Laaksonen, Timo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8944590/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35433006
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2tc00156j
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author Isokuortti, Jussi
Kiiski, Iiro
Sikanen, Tiina
Durandin, Nikita
Laaksonen, Timo
author_facet Isokuortti, Jussi
Kiiski, Iiro
Sikanen, Tiina
Durandin, Nikita
Laaksonen, Timo
author_sort Isokuortti, Jussi
collection PubMed
description The full potential of triplet fusion photon upconversion (TF-UC) of providing high-energy photons locally with low-energy excitation is limited in biomedicine and life sciences by its oxygen sensitivity. This hampers the applicability of TF-UC systems in sensors, imaging, optogenetics and drug release. Despite the advances in improving the oxygen tolerability of TF-UC systems, the evaluation of oxygen tolerability is based on comparing the performance at completely deoxygenated (0% oxygen) and ambient (20–21%) conditions, leaving the physiological oxygen levels (0.3–13.5%) neglected. This oversight is not deliberate and is only the result of the lack of simple and predictable methods to obtain and maintain these physiological oxygen levels in an optical setup. Herein, we demonstrate the use of microfluidic chips made of oxygen depleting materials to study the oxygen tolerability of four different micellar nanocarriers made of FDA-approved materials with various oxygen scavenging capabilities by screening their TF-UC performance over physiological oxygen levels. All nanocarriers were capable of efficient TF-UC even in ambient conditions. However, utilizing oxygen scavengers in the oil phase of the nanocarrier improves the oxygen tolerability considerably. For example, at the mean tumour oxygen level (1.4%), nanocarriers made of surfactants and oil phase both capable of oxygen scavenging retained remarkably 80% of their TF-UC emission. This microfluidic concept enables faster, simpler and more realistic evaluation of, not only TF-UC, but any micro or nanoscale oxygen-sensitive system and facilitates their development and implementation in biomedical and life science applications.
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spelling pubmed-89445902022-04-14 Microfluidic oxygen tolerability screening of nanocarriers for triplet fusion photon upconversion Isokuortti, Jussi Kiiski, Iiro Sikanen, Tiina Durandin, Nikita Laaksonen, Timo J Mater Chem C Mater Chemistry The full potential of triplet fusion photon upconversion (TF-UC) of providing high-energy photons locally with low-energy excitation is limited in biomedicine and life sciences by its oxygen sensitivity. This hampers the applicability of TF-UC systems in sensors, imaging, optogenetics and drug release. Despite the advances in improving the oxygen tolerability of TF-UC systems, the evaluation of oxygen tolerability is based on comparing the performance at completely deoxygenated (0% oxygen) and ambient (20–21%) conditions, leaving the physiological oxygen levels (0.3–13.5%) neglected. This oversight is not deliberate and is only the result of the lack of simple and predictable methods to obtain and maintain these physiological oxygen levels in an optical setup. Herein, we demonstrate the use of microfluidic chips made of oxygen depleting materials to study the oxygen tolerability of four different micellar nanocarriers made of FDA-approved materials with various oxygen scavenging capabilities by screening their TF-UC performance over physiological oxygen levels. All nanocarriers were capable of efficient TF-UC even in ambient conditions. However, utilizing oxygen scavengers in the oil phase of the nanocarrier improves the oxygen tolerability considerably. For example, at the mean tumour oxygen level (1.4%), nanocarriers made of surfactants and oil phase both capable of oxygen scavenging retained remarkably 80% of their TF-UC emission. This microfluidic concept enables faster, simpler and more realistic evaluation of, not only TF-UC, but any micro or nanoscale oxygen-sensitive system and facilitates their development and implementation in biomedical and life science applications. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2022-02-07 /pmc/articles/PMC8944590/ /pubmed/35433006 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2tc00156j Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Isokuortti, Jussi
Kiiski, Iiro
Sikanen, Tiina
Durandin, Nikita
Laaksonen, Timo
Microfluidic oxygen tolerability screening of nanocarriers for triplet fusion photon upconversion
title Microfluidic oxygen tolerability screening of nanocarriers for triplet fusion photon upconversion
title_full Microfluidic oxygen tolerability screening of nanocarriers for triplet fusion photon upconversion
title_fullStr Microfluidic oxygen tolerability screening of nanocarriers for triplet fusion photon upconversion
title_full_unstemmed Microfluidic oxygen tolerability screening of nanocarriers for triplet fusion photon upconversion
title_short Microfluidic oxygen tolerability screening of nanocarriers for triplet fusion photon upconversion
title_sort microfluidic oxygen tolerability screening of nanocarriers for triplet fusion photon upconversion
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8944590/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35433006
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2tc00156j
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