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Biodegradable, Elastomeric, and Intrinsically Photoluminescent Poly(Silicon‐Citrates) with high Photostability and Biocompatibility for Tissue Regeneration and Bioimaging
Author(s) -
Du Yuzhang,
Xue Yumeng,
Ma Peter X.,
Chen Xiaofeng,
Lei Bo
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
advanced healthcare materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.288
H-Index - 90
eISSN - 2192-2659
pISSN - 2192-2640
DOI - 10.1002/adhm.201500643
Subject(s) - biocompatibility , materials science , elastomer , polymer , nanotechnology , fluorescence , quantum yield , biodegradable polymer , polymerization , photoluminescence , regeneration (biology) , luminescence , optoelectronics , composite material , physics , quantum mechanics , metallurgy , biology , microbiology and biotechnology
Biodegradable polymer biomaterials with intrinsical photoluminescent properties have attracted much interest, due to their potential advantages for tissue regeneration and noninvasive bioimaging. However, few of current biodegradable polymers possess tunable intrinsically fluorescent properties, such as high photostability, fluorescent lifetime, and quantum field, and strong mechanical properties for meeting the requirements of biomedical applications. Here, by a facile one‐step thermal polymerization, elastomeric poly(silicone‐citrate) (PSC) hybrid polymers are developed with controlled biodegradability and mechanical properties, tunable inherent fluorescent emission (up to 600 nm), high photostability (beyond 180 min for UV and six months for natural light), fluorescent lifetime (near 10 ns) and quantum yield (16%–35%), high cellular biocompatibility, and minimal inflammatory response in vivo, which provide advantages over conventional fluorescent dyes, quantum dots, and current fluorescent polymers. The promising applications of PSC hybrids for cell and implants imaging in vitro and in vivo are successfully demonstrated. The development of elastomeric PSC polymer may provide a new strategy in synthesizing new inorganic–organic hybrid photoluminescent materials for tissue regeneration and bioimaging applications.