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      AIE Nanoparticles with High Stimulated Emission Depletion Efficiency and Photobleaching Resistance for Long-Term Super-Resolution Bioimaging

      1 , 2 , 3 , 1 , 2
      Advanced Materials
      Wiley

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          Most cited references32

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          The fluorescent toolbox for assessing protein location and function.

          Advances in molecular biology, organic chemistry, and materials science have recently created several new classes of fluorescent probes for imaging in cell biology. Here we review the characteristic benefits and limitations of fluorescent probes to study proteins. The focus is on protein detection in live versus fixed cells: determination of protein expression, localization, activity state, and the possibility for combination of fluorescent light microscopy with electron microscopy. Small organic fluorescent dyes, nanocrystals ("quantum dots"), autofluorescent proteins, small genetic encoded tags that can be complexed with fluorochromes, and combinations of these probes are highlighted.
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            Amplified stimulated emission in upconversion nanoparticles for super-resolution nanoscopy

            Lanthanide-doped glasses and crystals are attractive for laser applications because the metastable energy levels of the trivalent lanthanide ions facilitate the establishment of population inversion and amplified stimulated emission at relatively low pump power. At the nanometre scale, lanthanide-doped upconversion nanoparticles (UCNPs) can now be made with precisely controlled phase, dimension and doping level. When excited in the near-infrared, these UCNPs emit stable, bright visible luminescence at a variety of selectable wavelengths, with single-nanoparticle sensitivity, which makes them suitable for advanced luminescence microscopy applications. Here we show that UCNPs doped with high concentrations of thulium ions (Tm3+), excited at a wavelength of 980 nanometres, can readily establish a population inversion on their intermediate metastable 3H4 level: the reduced inter-emitter distance at high Tm3+ doping concentration leads to intense cross-relaxation, inducing a photon-avalanche-like effect that rapidly populates the metastable 3H4 level, resulting in population inversion relative to the 3H6 ground level within a single nanoparticle. As a result, illumination by a laser at 808 nanometres, matching the upconversion band of the 3H4 → 3H6 transition, can trigger amplified stimulated emission to discharge the 3H4 intermediate level, so that the upconversion pathway to generate blue luminescence can be optically inhibited. We harness these properties to realize low-power super-resolution stimulated emission depletion (STED) microscopy and achieve nanometre-scale optical resolution (nanoscopy), imaging single UCNPs; the resolution is 28 nanometres, that is, 1/36th of the wavelength. These engineered nanocrystals offer saturation intensity two orders of magnitude lower than those of fluorescent probes currently employed in stimulated emission depletion microscopy, suggesting a new way of alleviating the square-root law that typically limits the resolution that can be practically achieved by such techniques.
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              A photostable AIE luminogen for specific mitochondrial imaging and tracking.

              Tracking the dynamics of mitochondrial morphology has attracted much research interest because of its involvement in early stage apoptosis and degenerative conditions. To follow this process, highly specific and photostable fluorescent probes are in demand. Commercially available mitochondria trackers, however, suffer from poor photostability. To overcome this limitation, we have designed and synthesized a fluorescent agent, tetraphenylethene-triphenylphosphonium (TPE-TPP), for mitochondrial imaging. Inherent from the mitochondrial-targeting ability of TPP groups and the aggregation-induced emission (AIE) characteristics of the TPE core, TPE-TPP possesses high specificity to mitochondria, superior photostability, and appreciable tolerance to environmental change, allowing imaging and tracking of the mitochondrial morphological changes in a long period of time.

                Author and article information

                Journal
                Advanced Materials
                Adv. Mater.
                Wiley
                09359648
                November 2017
                November 2017
                October 04 2017
                : 29
                : 43
                : 1703643
                Affiliations
                [1 ]State Key Laboratory of Modern Optical Instrumentation; Centre for Optical and Electromagnetic Research; Zhejiang Provincial Key Laboratory for Sensing Technologies; Zhejiang University; Hangzhou 310058 China
                [2 ]Department of Chemistry; Hong Kong Branch of Chinese National Engineering Research Center for Tissue Restoration and Reconstruction; Division of Life Science; State Key Laboratory of Molecular Neuroscience; Institute for Advanced Study; Institute of Molecular Functional Materials; Division of Biomedical Engineering; The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology; Clear Water Bay Kowloon Hong Kong China
                [3 ]State Key Lab of Supramolecular Structure and Materials; Jilin University; Changchun 130012 China
                Article
                10.1002/adma.201703643
                71483a0f-e981-4de6-9065-419063a8b5ec
                © 2017

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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