Yeteng Zhong
Stanford University
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Featured researches published by Yeteng Zhong.
Advanced Materials | 2017
Qinglai Yang; Zhuoran Ma; Huasen Wang; Bin Zhou; Shoujun Zhu; Yeteng Zhong; Junying Wang; Hao Wan; Alexander L. Antaris; Rui Ma; Xiao Zhang; Jingyi Yang; Xiao-Dong Zhang; Haitao Sun; Weiqiang Liu; Yongye Liang; Hongjie Dai
A new design for second near-infrared window (NIR-II) molecular fluorophores based on a shielding unit-donor-acceptor-donor-shielding unit (S-D-A-D-S) structure is reported. With 3,4-ethylenedioxy thiophene as the donor and fluorene as the shielding unit, the best performance fluorophores IR-FE and IR-FEP exhibit an emission quantum yield of 31% in toluene and 2.0% in water, respectively, representing the brightest organic dyes in NIR-II region reported so far.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017
Shoujun Zhu; Qinglai Yang; Alexander L. Antaris; Jingying Yue; Zhuoran Ma; Huasen Wang; Wei Huang; Hao Wan; Joy Wang; Shuo Diao; Bo Zhang; Xiaoyang Li; Yeteng Zhong; Kuai Yu; Guosong Hong; Jian Luo; Yongye Liang; Hongjie Dai
Significance Fluorescence-based optical imaging is an important tool allowing researchers and clinicians to molecularly probe wide-ranging biological structures and processes. To break through the traditional molecular imaging window spanning from the visible to the near-infrared (NIR)-I (400–900 nm) region for imaging multiplicity, newly designed and ultrapurified fluorescent probe-antibody conjugates with fluorescence emissions in the NIR-II region (1,000–1,700 nm) have been developed. These NIR-II probes can reduce background autofluorescence for deep-tissue molecular imaging in a 3D imaging mode. These probes open up more and deeper nonoverlapping molecular imaging channels for complex biological systems. Fluorescence imaging multiplicity of biological systems is an area of intense focus, currently limited to fluorescence channels in the visible and first near-infrared (NIR-I; ∼700–900 nm) spectral regions. The development of conjugatable fluorophores with longer wavelength emission is highly desired to afford more targeting channels, reduce background autofluorescence, and achieve deeper tissue imaging depths. We have developed NIR-II (1,000–1,700 nm) molecular imaging agents with a bright NIR-II fluorophore through high-efficiency click chemistry to specific molecular antibodies. Relying on buoyant density differences during density gradient ultracentrifugation separations, highly pure NIR-II fluorophore-antibody conjugates emitting ∼1,100 nm were obtained for use as molecular-specific NIR-II probes. This facilitated 3D staining of ∼170-μm histological brain tissues sections on a home-built confocal microscope, demonstrating multicolor molecular imaging across both the NIR-I and NIR-II windows (800–1,700 nm).
Nature Communications | 2017
Yeteng Zhong; Zhuoran Ma; Shoujun Zhu; Jingying Yue; Mingxi Zhang; Alexander L. Antaris; Jie Yuan; Ran Cui; Hao Wan; Ying Zhou; Weizhi Wang; Ngan F. Huang; Jian Luo; Zhiyuan Hu; Hongjie Dai
In vivo fluorescence imaging in the near-infrared region between 1500–1700 nm (NIR-IIb window) affords high spatial resolution, deep-tissue penetration, and diminished auto-fluorescence due to the suppressed scattering of long-wavelength photons and large fluorophore Stokes shifts. However, very few NIR-IIb fluorescent probes exist currently. Here, we report the synthesis of a down-conversion luminescent rare-earth nanocrystal with cerium doping (Er/Ce co-doped NaYbF4 nanocrystal core with an inert NaYF4 shell). Ce doping is found to suppress the up-conversion pathway while boosting down-conversion by ~9-fold to produce bright 1550 nm luminescence under 980 nm excitation. Optimization of the inert shell coating surrounding the core and hydrophilic surface functionalization minimize the luminescence quenching effect by water. The resulting biocompatible, bright 1550 nm emitting nanoparticles enable fast in vivo imaging of blood vasculature in the mouse brain and hindlimb in the NIR-IIb window with short exposure time of 20 ms for rare-earth based probes.Fluorescence imaging in the near-infrared window between 1500–1700 nm (NIR-IIb window) offers superior spatial resolution and tissue penetration depth, but few NIR-IIb probes exist. Here, the authors synthesize rare earth down-converting nanocrystals as promising fluorescent probes for in vivo imaging in this spectral region.
Advanced Materials | 2015
Yeteng Zhong; Iman Rostami; Zihua Wang; Hongjie Dai; Zhiyuan Hu
A novel Nd(3+) -sensitized upconversion nanoparticle (UCNP) that can be excited by near-infrared 740 nm light-emitting diode (LED) lamps with bright upconversion luminescence is designed. Yb(3+) ion distribution is engineered to increase the energy migration efficiency. The benefit of the novel LED-excited UCNPs is demonstrated by imaging of breast cancer cells and enabling an economic handheld semiquantitative visual measurement device.
Nature Communications | 2018
Hao Wan; Jingying Yue; Shoujun Zhu; Takaaki Uno; Xiao-Dong Zhang; Qinglai Yang; Kuai Yu; Guosong Hong; Junying Wang; Lulin Li; Zhuoran Ma; Hongpeng Gao; Yeteng Zhong; Jessica Su; Alexander L. Antaris; Yan Xia; Jian Luo; Yongye Liang; Hongjie Dai
Fluorescence imaging of biological systems in the second near-infrared (NIR-II, 1000–1700 nm) window has shown promise of high spatial resolution, low background, and deep tissue penetration owing to low autofluorescence and suppressed scattering of long wavelength photons. Here we develop a bright organic nanofluorophore (named p-FE) for high-performance biological imaging in the NIR-II window. The bright NIR-II >1100 nm fluorescence emission from p-FE affords non-invasive in vivo tracking of blood flow in mouse brain vessels. Excitingly, p-FE enables one-photon based, three-dimensional (3D) confocal imaging of vasculatures in fixed mouse brain tissue with a layer-by-layer imaging depth up to ~1.3 mm and sub-10 µm high spatial resolution. We also perform in vivo two-color fluorescence imaging in the NIR-II window by utilizing p-FE as a vasculature imaging agent emitting between 1100 and 1300 nm and single-walled carbon nanotubes (CNTs) emitting above 1500 nm to highlight tumors in mice.Imaging in the second near-infrared window has attracted attention due to superior penetration depth and low signal interference. Here, the authors describe a new organic nano fluorophore with high quantum yield and demonstrate its use for in vivo imaging.
Advanced Materials | 2018
Shoujun Zhu; Sonia Herraiz; Jingying Yue; Mingxi Zhang; Hao Wan; Qinglai Yang; Zhuoran Ma; Yan Wang; Jiahuan He; Alexander L. Antaris; Yeteng Zhong; Shuo Diao; Yi Feng; Ying Zhou; Kuai Yu; Guosong Hong; Yongye Liang; Aaron J. W. Hsueh; Hongjie Dai
Greatly reduced scattering in the second near-infrared (NIR-II) region (1000-1700 nm) opens up many new exciting avenues of bioimaging research, yet NIR-II fluorescence imaging is mostly implemented by using nontargeted fluorophores or wide-field imaging setups, limiting the signal-to-background ratio and imaging penetration depth due to poor specific binding and out-of-focus signals. A newly developed high-performance NIR-II bioconjugate enables targeted imaging of a specific organ in the living body with high quality. Combined with a home-built NIR-II confocal set-up, the enhanced imaging technique allows 900 µm-deep 3D organ imaging without tissue clearing techniques. Bioconjugation of two hormones to nonoverlapping NIR-II fluorophores facilitates two-color imaging of different receptors, demonstrating unprecedented multicolor live molecular imaging across the NIR-II window. This deep tissue imaging of specific receptors in live animals allows development of noninvasive molecular imaging of multifarious models of normal and neoplastic organs in vivo, beyond the traditional visible to NIR-I range. The developed NIR-II fluorescence microscopy will become a powerful imaging technique for deep tissue imaging without any physical sectioning or clearing treatment of the tissue.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2018
Mingxi Zhang; Jingying Yue; Ran Cui; Zhuoran Ma; Hao Wan; Feifei Wang; Shoujun Zhu; Ying Zhou; Yun Kuang; Yeteng Zhong; Dai-Wen Pang; Hongjie Dai
Significance In vivo fluorescence imaging in near IR-IIb window (1,500–1,700 nm) can provide high spatial and temporal resolution and deep tissue penetration for fundamental research and potential translations. Herein, a bright fluorescent probe emitting at ∼1,600 nm based on lead sulfide (PbS)/CdS quantum dots was developed. The CdS shell helped to chemically passivate and retain the high fluorescence of the PbS core after phase transfer to aqueous solutions for biocompatibility. The 1,600-nm emitting probe allowed noninvasive, millimeter-deep fluorescence imaging at high speeds up to 60 frames per second with micrometer-scale spatial resolution in 2D wide-field and 3D confocal modes. The probes were nontoxic and largely excreted over 1 month, providing a tool for in vivo research of preclinical animal models. With suppressed photon scattering and diminished autofluorescence, in vivo fluorescence imaging in the 1,500- to 1,700-nm range of the near-IR (NIR) spectrum (NIR-IIb window) can afford high clarity and deep tissue penetration. However, there has been a lack of NIR-IIb fluorescent probes with sufficient brightness and aqueous stability. Here, we present a bright fluorescent probe emitting at ∼1,600 nm based on core/shell lead sulfide/cadmium sulfide (CdS) quantum dots (CSQDs) synthesized in organic phase. The CdS shell plays a critical role of protecting the lead sulfide (PbS) core from oxidation and retaining its bright fluorescence through the process of amphiphilic polymer coating and transferring to water needed for imparting aqueous stability and compatibility. The resulting CSQDs with a branched PEG outer layer exhibited a long blood circulation half-life of 7 hours and enabled through-skin, real-time imaging of blood flows in mouse vasculatures at an unprecedented 60 frames per second (fps) speed by detecting ∼1,600-nm fluorescence under 808-nm excitation. It also allowed through-skin in vivo confocal 3D imaging of tumor vasculatures in mice with an imaging depth of ∼1.2 mm. The PEG-CSQDs accumulated in tumor effectively through the enhanced permeation and retention effect, affording a high tumor-to-normal tissue ratio up to ∼32 owing to the bright ∼1,600-nm emission and nearly zero autofluorescence background resulting from a large ∼800-nm Stoke’s shift. The aqueous-compatible CSQDs are excreted through the biliary pathway without causing obvious toxicity effects, suggesting a useful class of ∼1,600-nm emitting probes for biomedical research.
Advanced Materials | 2018
Weizhi Wang; Zhuoran Ma; Shoujun Zhu; Hao Wan; Jingying Yue; Huilong Ma; Rui Ma; Qinglai Yang; Zihua Wang; Qian Li; Yixia Qian; Chunyan Yue; Yuehua Wang; Linyang Fan; Yeteng Zhong; Ying Zhou; Hongpeng Gao; Junshan Ruan; Zhiyuan Hu; Yongye Liang; Hongjie Dai
In vivo molecular imaging of tumors targeting a specific cancer cell marker is a promising strategy for cancer diagnosis and imaging guided surgery and therapy. While targeted imaging often relies on antibody-modified probes, peptides can afford targeting probes with small sizes, high penetrating ability, and rapid excretion. Recently, in vivo fluorescence imaging in the second near-infrared window (NIR-II, 1000-1700 nm) shows promise in reaching sub-centimeter depth with microscale resolution. Here, a novel peptide (named CP) conjugated NIR-II fluorescent probe is reported for molecular tumor imaging targeting a tumor stem cell biomarker CD133. The click chemistry derived peptide-dye (CP-IRT dye) probe afforded efficient in vivo tumor targeting in mice with a high tumor-to-normal tissue signal ratio (T/NT > 8). Importantly, the CP-IRT probes are rapidly renal excreted (≈87% excretion within 6 h), in stark contrast to accumulation in the liver for typical antibody-dye probes. Further, with NIR-II emitting CP-IRT probes, urethra of mice can be imaged fluorescently for the first time noninvasively through intact tissue. The NIR-II fluorescent, CD133 targeting imaging probes are potentially useful for human use in the clinic for cancer diagnosis and therapy.
bioRxiv | 2018
Feifei Wang; Hao Wan; Jingying Yue; Mingxi Zhang; Zhuoran Ma; Qinchao Sun; Liangqiong Qu; Huilong Ma; Yeteng Zhong; Ye Tian; Guosong Hong; Wen J. Li; Yongye Liang; Lianqing Liu; Hongjie Dai
Deep-tissue three-dimensional optical imaging of live mammals in vivo with high spatiotemporal resolution in non-invasive manners has been challenging due to light scattering. Here, we developed near-infrared (NIR) light sheet microscopy (LSM) with optical excitation and emission wavelengths up to ~ 1320 nm and ~ 1700 nm respectively, far into the NIR-II (1000-1700 nm) region for 3D optical sectioning through live tissues. Suppressed scattering of both excitation and emission photons allowed one-photon optical sectioning at ~ 2 mm depth in highly scattering brain tissues. NIR-II LSM enabled non-invasive in vivo imaging of live mice, revealing never-before-seen dynamic processes such as highly abnormal tumor microcirculation, and 3D molecular imaging of an important immune checkpoint protein, programmed-death ligand 1 (PD-L1) receptors at the single cell scale in tumors. In vivo two-color near-infrared light sheet sectioning enabled simultaneous volumetric imaging of tumor vasculatures and PD-L1 proteins in live mammals.
Nano Research | 2018
Zhuoran Ma; Hao Wan; Weizhi Wang; Xiao-Dong Zhang; Takaaki Uno; Qianglai Yang; Jingying Yue; Hongpeng Gao; Yeteng Zhong; Ye Tian; Qinchao Sun; Yongye Liang; Hongjie Dai
Theranostic nanoparticles are integrated systems useful for simultaneous diagnosis and imaging guided delivery of therapeutic drugs, with wide ranging potential applications in the clinic. Here we developed a theranostic nanoparticle (~ 24 nm size by dynamic light scattering) p-FE-PTX-FA based on polymeric micelle encapsulating an organic dye (FE) fluorescing in the 1,000–1,700 nm second near-infrared (NIR-II) window and an anti-cancer drug paclitaxel. Folic acid (FA) was conjugated to the nanoparticles to afford specific binding to molecular folate receptors on murine breast cancer 4T1 tumor cells. In vivo, the nanoparticles accumulated in 4T1 tumor through both passive and active targeting effect. Under an 808 nm laser excitation, fluorescence detection above 1,300 nm afforded a large Stokes shift, allowing targeted molecular imaging tumor with high signal to background ratios, reaching a high tumor to normal tissue signal ratio (T/NT) of (20.0 ± 2.3). Further, 4T1 tumors on mice were completed eradicated by paclitaxel released from p-FE-PTA-FA within 20 days of the first injection. Pharmacokinetics and histology studies indicated p-FE-PTX-FA had no obvious toxic side effects to major organs. This represented the first NIR-II theranostic agent developed.