4.8 Article

Confinement of Dyes inside Boron Nitride Nanotubes: Photostable and Shifted Fluorescence down to the Near Infrared

Journal

ADVANCED MATERIALS
Volume 32, Issue 29, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adma.202001429

Keywords

bio-imaging; nanotube heterostructure; NIR-II fluorescence; molecular aggregation; photostable fluorescence

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) [RGPIN-2019-06545, RGPAS-2019-00050]
  2. Canada Research Chairs [35637]
  3. Canada foundation for innovation [35637]
  4. consortium industriel de recherche et d'innovation en technologies medicales du Quebec (MEDTEQ)
  5. La fondation du cancer du sein du Quebec
  6. GDRi Graphene and Co
  7. GDRi multifunctional nanomaterials
  8. Graphene Flagship Core 1 [604391]
  9. French National Research Agency [ANR-10-INBS-04]
  10. La Ligue contre le Cancer (Gironde)
  11. Association de Recherche contre le Cancer
  12. GSO Canceropole
  13. Photon etc.
  14. [Marie-Skodowska-Curie-IF 706476-BrightPhoton]

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Fluorescence is ubiquitous in life science and used in many fields of research ranging from ecology to medicine. Among the most common fluorogenic compounds, dyes are being exploited in bioimaging for their outstanding optical properties from UV down to the near IR (NIR). However, dye molecules are often toxic to living organisms and photodegradable, which limits the time window for in vivo experiments. Here, it is demonstrated that organic dye molecules are passivated and photostable when they are encapsulated inside a boron nitride nanotube (dyes@BNNT). The results show that the BNNTs drive an aggregation of the encapsulated dyes, which induces a redshifted fluorescence from visible to NIR-II. The fluorescence remains strong and stable, exempt of bleaching and blinking, over a time scale longer than that of free dyes by more than 10(4). This passivation also reduces the toxicity of the dyes and induces exceptional chemical robustness, even in harsh conditions. These properties are highlighted in bioimaging where the dyes@BNNT nanohybrids are used as fluorescent nanoprobes for in vivo monitoring of Daphnia Pulex microorganisms and for diffusion tracking on human hepatoblastoma cells with two-photon imaging.

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