Smart Persistent Luminescence Imaging for Early Diagnosis of Drug-Induced Liver Injury.

Chemical & Biomedical Imaging Pub Date : 2024-11-15 eCollection Date: 2025-02-24 DOI:10.1021/cbmi.4c00056
Feng Zhang, Liang Song, Ye Lin, Zhengxia Yang, Junpeng Shi, Quan Yuan, Yun Zhang
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Drug-induced liver injury (DILI) has the potential to cause severe hepatitis and increases the risk of death which remains unresolved in current medical practice. During DILI, the H2O2 level is upregulated in the liver. Conventional blood tests fail to offer early and real-time visualization of DILI in vivo. Here we report a smart persistent luminescent approach to evaluate DILI in vivo using persistent luminescence nanoprobes which are conjugated with single-stranded DNA containing Ferrocene (Fc). Upon injection, these nanoprobes mainly accumulate in the liver and the persistent luminescence of nanoprobes remains suppressed owing to energy transfer to the ferrocene. The presence of H2O2 during DILI initiates the Fenton reaction to induce cleavage of DNA chains, and the ferrocene dissociates from the probes, leading to fast restoration of the persistent luminescence. The DILI imaging results revealed a signal-to-noise ratio of 20.9, approximately 10 h earlier than the serum-based detection methods. With its exceptional sensitivity, high signal-to-noise ratio, and real-time imaging capabilities, this smart persistent luminescent approach holds great promise for the early diagnosis of DILI.

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来源期刊
Chemical & Biomedical Imaging
Chemical & Biomedical Imaging 化学与生物成像-
CiteScore
1.00
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0.00%
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期刊介绍: Chemical & Biomedical Imaging is a peer-reviewed open access journal devoted to the publication of cutting-edge research papers on all aspects of chemical and biomedical imaging. This interdisciplinary field sits at the intersection of chemistry physics biology materials engineering and medicine. The journal aims to bring together researchers from across these disciplines to address cutting-edge challenges of fundamental research and applications.Topics of particular interest include but are not limited to:Imaging of processes and reactionsImaging of nanoscale microscale and mesoscale materialsImaging of biological interactions and interfacesSingle-molecule and cellular imagingWhole-organ and whole-body imagingMolecular imaging probes and contrast agentsBioluminescence chemiluminescence and electrochemiluminescence imagingNanophotonics and imagingChemical tools for new imaging modalitiesChemical and imaging techniques in diagnosis and therapyImaging-guided drug deliveryAI and machine learning assisted imaging
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