4.8 Article

Photocontrollable Proteins for Optoacoustic Imaging

Journal

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 91, Issue 9, Pages 5470-5477

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.9b01048

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Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [STI656/1-1]

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Photocontrollable proteins revolutionized life-science imaging due to their contribution to subdiffraction-resolution optical microscopy. They might have yet another lasting impact on photo- or optoacoustic imaging (OA). OA combines optical contrast with ultrasound detection enabling high-resolution real-time in vivo imaging well-beyond the typical penetration depth of optical methods. While OA already showed numerous applications relying on endogenous contrast from blood hemoglobin or lipids, its application in the life-science was limited by a lack of labels overcoming the strong signal from the aforementioned endogenous absorbers. Here, a number of recent studies showed that photocontrollable proteins provide the means to overcome this barrier eventually enabling OA to image small cell numbers in a complete organism in vivo. In this Feature article, we introduce the key photocontrollable proteins, explain the basic concepts, and highlight achievements that have been already made.

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