4.7 Article

Probing polyvinylpyrrolidone-passivated graphene oxide nanoflakes as contrast agents inside tissue-like phantoms via multimodal confocal microscopy

Journal

TALANTA
Volume 247, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.talanta.2022.123581

Keywords

Polyvinylpyrrolidone; Graphene oxide; Confocal Raman and fluorescence microscopy; Optical contrast agents; Tissue-like phantoms

Funding

  1. Ministry of Research and Innovation, CNCS-UEFISCDI, within PNCDI III [PN-III-P4-ID-PCCF-2016-0142]

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Graphene oxide possesses attractive electrical, thermal, and mechanical properties, as well as visible and near infrared photoluminescence, making it a promising contrast agent for cell and tissue visualization. However, its low emission efficiency at neutral pH hinders its biomedical application. By passivating graphene oxide nanoflakes with polyvinylpyrrolidone, the photoluminescence can be improved at pH relevant for biomedical applications. The potential of PVP-GO nanocomposites as dual contrast agents in tissue-like agarose phantoms has been demonstrated.
Beside attractive electrical, thermal and mechanical properties, graphene oxide (GO) exhibits visible and near infrared (NIR) photoluminescence (PL) and well-defined fingerprint Raman bands which are remarkable optical signatures to implement GO as new contrast agent for the visualization of cells or tissue, including cancer tumors. However, the biomedical use of GO as optical contrast agent is to some extent hindered by the intrinsic low emission efficiency especially at neutral pH. Herein, we successfully modulate the PL of GO nanoflakes in acidic and neutral medium by passivating them with polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP), an amphiphilic and biocompatible polymer, thus improving the PL at pH relevant for biomedical applications. We demonstrate the potential of as-fabricated PVP-GO nanocomposites to operate as dual Raman-PL contrast agents inside tissue-like agarosephantoms via scanning confocal Raman microscopy (CRM) under excitation at 532 nm. Super-resolution re-scan confocal microscopy (RCM) was further employed to investigate the distribution of PVP-GO inside biological phantoms at 3D level under three excitation lines (405, 488, and 561 nm). Finally, two-photon excited fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (TPE-FLIM) at 810 nm excitation reveals the ability of PVP-GO to serve as NIR-activatable contrast agent inside tissue-like phantom. Notably, PVP coating empowers GO nanoflakes not only with enhanced optical signature, but also with excellent dispersibility inside biological phantoms, thus offering improved labeling performance of as-designed imaging contrast agent.

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