Publication | Open Access
Carbon Nanoparticle-based Fluorescent Bioimaging Probes
733
Citations
45
References
2013
Year
Fluorescent nanoparticle probes offer superior brightness and photostability over conventional molecular probes, but heavy‑metal semiconductor nanocrystals raise toxicity concerns that limit their biomedical use. This study introduces a non‑toxic, carbon‑nanoparticle‑based fluorescent probe suitable for biological staining and diagnostics. The authors chemically synthesized 1–10 nm carbon nanoparticles with size‑dependent, tunable visible emission and functionalized them into 5–15 nm probes for cell imaging. The resulting probes exhibit bright, tunable visible emission and effective cell imaging performance.
Fluorescent nanoparticle-based imaging probes have advanced current labelling technology and are expected to generate new medical diagnostic tools based on their superior brightness and photostability compared with conventional molecular probes. Although significant progress has been made in fluorescent semiconductor nanocrystal-based biological labelling and imaging, the presence of heavy metals and the toxicity issues associated with heavy metals have severely limited the application potential of these nanocrystals. Here, we report a fluorescent carbon nanoparticle-based, alternative, nontoxic imaging probe that is suitable for biological staining and diagnostics. We have developed a chemical method to synthesise highly fluorescent carbon nanoparticles 1–10 nm in size; these particles exhibit size-dependent, tunable visible emission. These carbon nanoparticles have been transformed into various functionalised nanoprobes with hydrodynamic diameters of 5–15 nm and have been used as cell imaging probes.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1