Issue 22, 2023, Issue in Progress

BODIPY-based near-infrared semiconducting polymer dot for selective yellow laser-excited cell imaging

Abstract

Semiconducting polymer dots (Pdots) with both narrow-band absorption and emission are desirable for multiplexed bioassay applications, but such Pdots with absorption peaks beyond 400 nm are difficult to achieve. Here we describe a donor–energy transfer unit–acceptor (D–ETU–A) design strategy to produce a BODIPY-based Pdot that exhibits simultaneously narrow absorption and emission bands. A green BODIPY (GBDP) unit was employed as the main building block of the polymer backbone, conferring a strong, narrow-band absorption around 551 nm. An NIR720 acceptor provides narrow-band NIR emission. The small Stokes shift of the GBDP donor allows introduction of a benzofurazan-based ETU, resulting in a ternary Pdot with a fluorescence quantum yield of 23.2%, the most efficient yellow-laser excitable Pdot. Due to the strong absorbance band centered at 551 nm and weak absorbance at 405 nm and 488 nm, the Pdot showed high single-particle brightness when excited by a 561 nm (yellow) laser, and selective yellow laser excitation when used to label MCF cells, with much greater brightness when excited at 561 nm than at 405 nm or 488 nm.

Graphical abstract: BODIPY-based near-infrared semiconducting polymer dot for selective yellow laser-excited cell imaging

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
17 Feb 2023
Accepted
25 Apr 2023
First published
22 May 2023
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

RSC Adv., 2023,13, 15121-15125

BODIPY-based near-infrared semiconducting polymer dot for selective yellow laser-excited cell imaging

L. Chen, Y. Jiang, S. Xu, J. Zhang, S. Jung, J. Yu, X. Zhang and D. T. Chiu, RSC Adv., 2023, 13, 15121 DOI: 10.1039/D3RA01083J

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