Journal
ACS APPLIED BIO MATERIALS
Volume 1, Issue 4, Pages 975-984Publisher
AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsabm.8b00145
Keywords
boron nitride; quantum dots; fluorescence lifetime; multiplexed imaging; intracellular sensing; two-photon excitation
Funding
- Australian Postgraduate Award
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Nanoparticles are key vehicles for targeted therapies because they can pass through biological barriers, enter into cells, and distribute within cell structures. We investigated the synthesis of blue and green emissive hexagonal boron nitride quantum dots (hBNQDs) using a liquid-exfoliation technique followed by hydrothermal treatment. A distinct shift from blue to bright-green emission was observed upon surface passivating the dots using poly(ethylene glycol) or PEG(200) under the same UV irradiation. The quantum yield of the hBNQDs increased with the surface passivation. Multiplexed imaging was accomplished using the hBNQDs in conjunction with organic dyes. The hBNQDs provided images with distinctive emission wavelengths and fluorescence lifetimes. Although the fluorescence signals of blue- and green-emissive hBNQDs overlap spectrally with those of the emission wavelengths of the organic dyes, the fluorescence lifetime data were resolved temporally using software-based time gates. The blue-emissive hBNQD-b quantum dots were validated as sensitive platforms for detecting intracellular ferric ions with a low limit of detection (20.6 nM). The green-emissive hBNQD-g quantum dots successfully identified intracellular variations in pH, and the localization in human breast cancer cells was determined during their life cycles via fluorescence lifetime imaging.
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