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BODIPY Derivatives as Molecular Photoacoustic Contrast Agents. Samir Laoui, 1 Seema Bag, 2 Olivier Dantiste , 1 Mathieu Frenette, 2 Maryam Hatamimoslehabadi, 1 Stephanie Bellinger-Buckley, 2 Jen-Chieh Tseng, 3 Jonathan Rochford, 2 Chandra Yelleswarapu 1
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BODIPY Derivatives as Molecular Photoacoustic Contrast Agents Samir Laoui,1 Seema Bag,2Olivier Dantiste,1 Mathieu Frenette,2 Maryam Hatamimoslehabadi,1 Stephanie Bellinger-Buckley,2 Jen-Chieh Tseng,3 Jonathan Rochford,2 Chandra Yelleswarapu1 3Lurie Family Imaging Center, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, MA 02215. 2 Department of Chemistry, 1 Department of Physics, University of Massachusetts Boston, Boston, MA 02125. This work is supported by UMass Boston and DF/HCC NIH U54 Minority Institution/Cancer Center Partnership Grant-1U54CA156732/4
Outline • Motivation • Background • Properties • Bodipy derivatives • PAZ-Scan • Data • Conclusion and future work
Motivation • Photoacoustic imaging/tomography (PAI) is an in vivo, non-ionizing imaging modality, that can provide location & metabolic activities of tumors with the help of contrast agents. • To date, a variety of near-infrared (NIR) absorbing fluorophores, e.g. IRDye800CW, AlexaFluor 750 and ICG, have been used as exogenous contrast agents for deep tissue imaging. • Such contrast agents were originally designed for fluorescent imaging applications and are thus optimized as such with a relatively poor photoacoustic response, their only redeeming feature being their excellent optical absorption in the biological transmission window of 600 – 1100 nm.
Background Jablonski diagram
Background - the photoacoustic effect SOUND LIGHT The photoacoustic effect (conversion of light into sound) was published in 1880 by Alexander Graham Bell
Desired Physical Properties of MPACs • Strong light absorption (emax) in biological transparent window (650 - 950 nm) • Large Stoke’s shift, dissipates excited state energy as heat (DH) via structural reorganization (DV) • A photoacoustic signal is basically a photoinduced heat + pressure wave
Desired Physical Properties of MPACs • Strong light absorption (emax) in biological transparent window (650 - 950 nm) • Small Stoke’s shift, very sharp excitation and emission peak, high fluorescence quantum yield. BODIPY Large emax, tunable lmax High Φf How to re-direct excited state energy? = Fluorescence Quenching
Tuning of BODIPY Photophysics F = 0 F = 0 Emission spectra Absorption spectra Fc-absorption spectra
PAZ-scan Experiment Nd:YAG Laser, 532 nm (or) OPO laser, 680-980 nm 3 nsec pulse width Ultrasound transducer to measure the photoacoustic signal Fiber probe to collect the fluorescence signal Optical detector to measure the transmitted energy
PA and Optical Response of MeOPh-BODIPY Both Linear and nonlinear absorption are occurring.
PA and Optical Response of MeOPh2-BODIPY Both Linear and nonlinear absorption are occurring.
PA Response of Fc and MEOH2-BODIPYs Reductive quenching mechanism
PA and Fluorescence of MeOH2-BODIPY Meoh2-BODIPY
Conclusion • Successfully engineered a PA response from the BODIPY chromophores. • Fluorescence quantum yield has been reduced from 0.9 to ~0 and the absorbed energy is channeled through non-radiative decay – increased in PA signal . • Current work in progress is to move from using BODIPY derivatives to using Curcumin derivatives.
Acknowledgement • Dr. Jonathan Rochford • Samir Laoui • Dr. Maryam Hatamimoslehabadi • Dr. Matthieu Fremette • Stephanie Bellinger-Buckley • U-54 • The Graduate Student Association at Umass-Boston