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Enhanced mitochondrial fluorescence imaging through confinement fluorescence effect within a rigid silicon suboxide network

  • Yu Shen
  • , Bin Fang
  • , Tao Shao
  • , Jiaxin Zhang
  • , Haoqin Li
  • , Limin Wang
  • , Panpan Li
  • , Hui Wang
  • , Hua Bai
  • , Kai Huang
  • , Wenbo Hu
  • , Ka Bian
  • , Bo Peng
  • , Lin Li
  • Northwestern Polytechnical University Xian
  • Anhui Xinhua University
  • Xiamen University
  • Future Display Institute in Xiamen
  • Tangdu Hospital, Fourth Military Medical University
  • Monash University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

6 Scopus citations

Abstract

Fluorescence imaging technology has emerged as a powerful tool for studying intricate mitochondrial morphology within living cells. However, the need for fluorophores with stable fluorescence intensity and low phototoxicity poses significant challenges, particularly for long-term live-cell mitochondrial monitoring. To address this, we introduce the confinement fluorescence effect (CFE) into the design of fluorophores. This strategy involves confining small-molecule fluorophores within a silicon suboxide network structure of nanoparticles (CEF-NPs), which restricts molecular rotation, resulting in the suppression of non-radiative transition and the isolation of encapsulated fluorophores from surrounding quenching factors. CFE-NPs (SY2@SiOx) exhibit exceptional properties, such as high fluorescence intensity (80-fold) and reduced phototoxicity (0.15-fold). Furthermore, the TPP + -functionalized CFE-NPs (SY2@SiOxTPP) demonstrated efficacy in mitochondrial imaging and mitochondrial dynamics monitoring. Biochemistry assays indicated that SY2@SiOxTPP exhibits significantly lower phototoxicity to mitochondrial functions compared to both small-molecule fluorophore and commercial Mito Tracker. This approach allows for the long-term dynamic monitoring of mitochondrial morphological changes through fluorescence imaging, without impairing mitochondrial functionality.

Original languageEnglish
Article number116823
JournalBiosensors and Bioelectronics
Volume267
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Jan 2025

Keywords

  • Confinement fluorescence effect
  • Fluorescence imaging
  • Fluorescent energy regulation
  • Minimum phototoxicity
  • Mitochondrial imaging

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