scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Ratiometric optical nanoprobes enable accurate molecular detection and imaging

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
This review elaborates upon existing optical nanoprobes that exploit ratiometric measurements for improved sensing and imaging, including fluorescence, surface enhanced Raman scattering (SERS), and photoacoustic nanoprops, and their potential biomedical applications for targeting specific biomolecule populations.
Abstract
Exploring and understanding biological and pathological changes are of great significance for early diagnosis and therapy of diseases. Optical sensing and imaging approaches have experienced major progress in this field. Particularly, an emergence of various functional optical nanoprobes has provided enhanced sensitivity, specificity, targeting ability, as well as multiplexing and multimodal capabilities due to improvements in their intrinsic physicochemical and optical properties. However, one of the biggest challenges of conventional optical nanoprobes is their absolute intensity-dependent signal readout, which causes inaccurate sensing and imaging results due to the presence of various analyte-independent factors that can cause fluctuations in their absolute signal intensity. Ratiometric measurements provide built-in self-calibration for signal correction, enabling more sensitive and reliable detection. Optimizing nanoprobe designs with ratiometric strategies can surmount many of the limitations encountered by traditional optical nanoprobes. This review first elaborates upon existing optical nanoprobes that exploit ratiometric measurements for improved sensing and imaging, including fluorescence, surface enhanced Raman scattering (SERS), and photoacoustic nanoprobes. Next, a thorough discussion is provided on design strategies for these nanoprobes, and their potential biomedical applications for targeting specific biomolecule populations (e.g. cancer biomarkers and small molecules with physiological relevance), for imaging the tumor microenvironment (e.g. pH, reactive oxygen species, hypoxia, enzyme and metal ions), as well as for intraoperative image guidance of tumor-resection procedures.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Photoacoustic Imaging: Contrast Agents and Their Biomedical Applications.

TL;DR: PA contrast agents are classified according to their components and function, and gold nanocrystals, gold‐nanocrystal assembly, transition‐metal chalcogenides/MXene‐based nanomaterials, carbon‐ based nanommaterials, other inorganic imaging agents, small organic molecules, semiconducting polymer nanoparticles, and nonlinear PA‐imaging contrastagents are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Recent advances in dual-emission ratiometric fluorescence probes for chemo/biosensing and bioimaging of biomarkers

TL;DR: This review systematically summarizes the recent progress on dual-emission ratiometric FL probes and covers a wide range of scientific disciplines and benefits further development of functionalized optical materials, luminescent devices and bioimaging technique.
Journal ArticleDOI

Molecular Engineering of NIR-II Fluorophores for Improved Biomedical Detection

TL;DR: The most recent advances in molecular engineering design strategies of NIR-II fluorophores and probes are summarized, then a selection of bioimaging and biosensing applications are highlighted.
Journal ArticleDOI

Disease Detection with Molecular Biomarkers: From Chemistry of Body Fluids to Nature-Inspired Chemical Sensors.

TL;DR: This article aims to review nature-inspired chemical sensors for enabling fast, relatively inexpensive, and minimally invasive diagnostics and follow-up of the health conditions via monitoring of biomarkers and volatile biomarkers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ratiometric fluorescence sensing of metal-organic frameworks: Tactics and perspectives

TL;DR: In this article, the design tactics of MOFs-based RF sensing and describes the detection mechanism of different RF sensors are described and summarized and prospected, based on different strategies of synthesis, the MRF-based sensors are categorized into three classes: intrinsic dual-emission, single-emissive MOFs with a chromophore and non-EMissive MRF with two chromophores.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Gold nanoparticles in chemical and biological sensing.

TL;DR: The advent of AuNP as a sensory element provided a broad spectrum of innovative approaches for the detection of metal ions, small molecules, proteins, nucleic acids, malignant cells, etc. in a rapid and efficient manner.
Journal ArticleDOI

Photoacoustic Tomography: In Vivo Imaging from Organelles to Organs

TL;DR: A review of the state of the art of photoacoustic tomography for both biological and clinical studies can be found in this paper, where the authors discuss the current state-of-the-art and discuss future prospects.
Journal ArticleDOI

Aggregation-induced emission: phenomenon, mechanism and applications.

TL;DR: The restriction of intramolecular rotation is identified as a main cause for the AIE effect and a series of new fluorescent and phosphorescent AIE systems with emission colours covering the entire visible spectral region and luminescence quantum yields up to unity are developed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Probing the Cytotoxicity Of Semiconductor Quantum Dots.

TL;DR: This work found that CdSe-core QDs were indeed acutely toxic under certain conditions and modulated by processing parameters during synthesis, exposure to ultraviolet light, and surface coatings, and suggests that cytotoxicity correlates with the liberation of free Cd2+ ions due to deterioration of the Cd Se lattice.
Journal ArticleDOI

Magnetic Nanoparticles in MR Imaging and Drug Delivery

TL;DR: A background on applications of MNPs as MR imaging contrast agents and as carriers for drug delivery and an overview of the recent developments in this area of research are provided.
Related Papers (5)