Carbon Dots for Optical Imaging in Vivo
Shanghai University · Clemson University · +2 more institutions
Abstract
It was found and recently reported that small carbon nanoparticles can be surface-passivated by organic or biomolecules to become strongly fluorescent. These fluorescent carbon nanoparticles, dubbed "carbon dots", can be successfully used for in vitro cell imaging with both one- and two-photon excitations, as already demonstrated in the literature. Here we report the first study using carbon dots for optical imaging in live mice. The results suggest that the carbon dots remain strongly fluorescent in vivo, which, coupled with their biocompatibility and nontoxic characteristics, might offer great potential for imaging and related biomedical applications.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 20.27
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 21
Authors
10- SYSheng‐Tao YangCorresponding
Shanghai University, Clemson University, Peking University, Beijing National Laboratory for Molecular Sciences
- LCLi Cao
Clemson University, Beijing National Laboratory for Molecular Sciences, Peking University, Shanghai University
- PGPengju G. Luo
Peking University, Shanghai University, Beijing National Laboratory for Molecular Sciences, Clemson University
- FLFushen Lu
Beijing National Laboratory for Molecular Sciences, Peking University, Clemson University, Shanghai University
- XWXin Wang
Shanghai University, Beijing National Laboratory for Molecular Sciences, Peking University, Clemson University
Topics & keywords
- Chemistry
- Biocompatibility
- Fluorescence
- Carbon fibers
- Nanotechnology
- Biomolecule
- In vivo
- Optical imaging