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Near-infrared excited luminescence and in vitro imaging of HeLa cells by using Mn(2+) enhanced Tb(3+) and Yb(3+) cooperative upconversion in NaYF(4) nanocrystals

Advanced biodetection and bioimaging require fluorescent labels which exhibit many, easily distinguishable colors to identify or study numerous biotargets in a single sample. Although numerous different colors have been demonstrated with lanthanide doped nanoparticles, these colors usually originate...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Prorok, Katarzyna, Olk, Michał, Skowicki, Michał, Kowalczyk, Agnieszka, Kotulska, Agata, Lipiński, Tomasz, Bednarkiewicz, Artur
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: RSC 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9416878/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36133550
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9na00336c
Descripción
Sumario:Advanced biodetection and bioimaging require fluorescent labels which exhibit many, easily distinguishable colors to identify or study numerous biotargets in a single sample. Although numerous different colors have been demonstrated with lanthanide doped nanoparticles, these colors usually originate from various ratios of overlapping multiple emission bands from activators, which severely limits the number of available labels. As a consequence, different lanthanide doped labels cannot be easily distinguished from each other (e.g. Er(3+) from Ho(3+)) in a quantitative way, when such labels are co-localized during microscopy wide-field imaging. It is therefore reasonable to expand the available choice of spectral signatures and not rely on just different colors. Other ions, such as Tb(3+) or Eu(3+), can offer new possibilities and unique spectral features in upconversion mode in this respect. For example, despite partial overlap with Er(3+) or Ho(3+) emission spectra, Tb(3+) ions display also unique and easily distinguishable spectral features at 580 nm. Unfortunately, in terms of brightness, Tb(3+) emission in upconversion mode is typically too weak to be useful. To improve the Tb(3+) upconversion emission intensity, a new approach, i.e. Mn(2+) co-doping, has been proposed and verified in this work. A versatile optimization of Tb(3+), Yb(3+) and Mn(2+) ion concentrations has been performed based on luminescence spectra and lifetime studies. The most intense emission was achieved for nanoparticles doped with 10% Mn(2+) ions, with over 30 times brighter intensity of Tb(3+) ions compared to the emission of nanocrystals without the addition of Mn(2+) ions. Additionally, as a proof of the concept, the surface of nanoparticles was coated with proteins and conjugated with folic acid, and such biofunctionalized nanoparticles were subsequently used for bioimaging of HeLa cells.