Published April 28, 2010
| Version v1
Journal article
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Enhancement of Aggregation-Induced Emission in Dye-Encapsulating Polymeric Micelles for Bioimaging
Description
Three amphiphilic block copolymers are employed to form polymeric micelles
and function as nanocarriers to disperse hydrophobic aggregation-induced
emission (AIE) dyes, 1,1,2,3,4,5-hexaphenylsilole (HPS) and/or
bis(4-(N-(1-naphthyl) phenylamino)-phenyl)fumaronitrile (NPAFN), into
aqueous solution for biological studies. Compared to their virtually nonemissive
properties in organic solutions, the fluorescence intensity of these
AIE dyes has increased significantly due to the spatial confinement that
restricts intramolecular rotation of these dyes and their better compatibility in
the hydrophobic core of polymeric micelles. The effect of the chemical
structure of micelle cores on the photophysical properties of AIE dyes are
investigated, and the fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) from the
green-emitting donor (HPS) to the red-emitting acceptor (NPAFN) is explored
by co-encapsulating this FRET pair in the same micelle core. The highest
fluorescence quantum yield (62%) could be achieved by encapsulating HPS
aggregates in the micelles. Efficient energy transfer (>99%) and high
amplification of emission (as high as 8 times) from the NPAFN acceptor could
also be achieved by spatially confining the HPS/NPAFN FRET pair in the
hydrophobic core of polymeric micelles. These micelles could be successfully
internalized into the RAW 264.7 cells to demonstrate high-quality fluorescent
images and cell viability due to improved quantum yield and reduced
cytotoxicity
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