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Noninvasive and Highly Multiplexed Five-Color Tumor Imaging of Multicore Near-Infrared Resonant Surface-Enhanced Raman Nanoparticles In Vivo
Author(s) -
Jung Ho Yu,
Idan Steinberg,
Ryan Davis,
Andrey V. Malkovskiy,
Aimen Zlitni,
Rochelle Karina Radzyminski,
Kyung Oh Jung,
Daniel Tan Chung,
Luis Dan Curet,
Aloma D’Souza,
Edwin Chang,
Jarrett Rosenberg,
Jos L. Campbell,
Hadas Frostig,
Seung Min Park,
Guillem Pratx,
Craig S. Levin,
Sanjiv S. Gambhir
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
acs nano
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.554
H-Index - 382
eISSN - 1936-086X
pISSN - 1936-0851
DOI - 10.1021/acsnano.1c07470
Subject(s) - preclinical imaging , in vivo , multiplexing , materials science , molecular imaging , raman spectroscopy , ex vivo , raman scattering , biomedical engineering , nanotechnology , optics , computer science , medicine , biology , physics , telecommunications , microbiology and biotechnology
In vivo multiplexed imaging aims for noninvasive monitoring of tumors with multiple channels without excision of the tissue. While most of the preclinical imaging has provided a number of multiplexing channels up to three, Raman imaging with surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) nanoparticles was suggested to offer higher multiplexing capability originating from their narrow spectral width. However, in vivo multiplexed SERS imaging is still in its infancy for multichannel visualization of tumors, which require both sufficient multiplicity and high sensitivity concurrently. Here we create multispectral palettes of gold multicore-near-infrared (NIR) resonant Raman dyes-silica shell SERS (NIR-SERRS) nanoparticle oligomers and demonstrate noninvasive and five-plex SERS imaging of the nanoparticle accumulation in tumors of living mice. We perform the five-plex ratiometric imaging of tumors by varying the administered ratio of the nanoparticles, which simulates the detection of multiple biomarkers with different expression levels in the tumor environment. Furthermore, since this method does not require the excision of tumor tissues at the imaging condition, we perform noninvasive and longitudinal imaging of the five-color nanoparticles in the tumors, which is not feasible with current ex vivo multiplexed tissue analysis platforms. Our work surpasses the multiplicity limit of previous preclinical tumor imaging methods while keeping enough sensitivity for tumor-targeted in vivo imaging and could enable the noninvasive assessment of multiple biological targets within the tumor microenvironment in living subjects.

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