4.7 Article

Small ultra-red fluorescent protein nanoparticles as exogenous probes for noninvasive tumor imaging in vivo

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2020.02.253

关键词

Far-red fluorescence; Fluorescent protein; Protein nanoparticle; Cancer imaging; Tumor imaging

资金

  1. Katzen Research Cancer Research Pilot Award

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Nanoparticles are excellent imaging agents for cancer, but variability in chemical structure, racemic mixtures, and addition of heavy metals hinders FDA approval in the United States. We developed a small ultra-red fluorescent protein, named smURFP, to have optical properties similar to the small-molecule Cy5, a heptamethine subclass of cyanine dyes (Ex/Em 642/670 nm). smURFP has a fluorescence quantum yield of 18% and expresses so well in E. coli, that gram quantities of fluorescent protein are purified from cultures in the laboratory. In this research, the fluorescent protein smURFP was combined with bovine serum albumin into fluorescent protein nanoparticles. These nanopartides are fluorescent with a quantum yield of 17% and 12-14 nm in diameter. The far-red fluorescent protein nanoparticles noninvasively image tumors in living mice via the enhanced permeation and retention (EPR) mechanism. This manuscript describes the use of a new fluorescent protein nanoparticle for in vivo fluorescent imaging. This protein nanopartide core should prove useful as a biomadomolecular scaffold, which could bear extended chemical modifications for studies, such as the in vivo imaging of fluorescent protein nanopartides targeted to primary and metastatic cancer, theranostic treatment, and/or dual-modality imaging with positron emission tomography for entire human imaging. (C) 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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