Integrative Biology 2019 Fall Seminar Series, Nov 8

Published: Nov. 5, 2019

12:00 noon
NC 3202

Near-Infrared Chemiluminescent Nanoparticles for In Vivo Optical Imaging

Jungjae Lee’s photoimaging techniques are a vital part of clinical diagnostics and biomedical research. Optical molecular imaging makes use of relatively harmless, low-energy light, and technically straightforward instrumentation. Bioluminescence imaging systems, particularly use of firefly luciferin, are attractive because they have inherently high signal contrast due to the lack of background emission. However, current bioluminescence imaging involves short-lived molecular species that are not stored and they typically emit visible light which does not penetrate far through heterogeneous biological media. Lee will describe a new paradigm for optical molecular imaging using singlet oxygen encapsulated inside a nanoparticle with near-infrared fluorescent dye molecules. Chemiluminescence can be stored indefinitely at temperatures below -20 oC, but upon warming to body temperature it undergoes a chemical reaction and emits near-infrared light that can pass through a living mouse. The whole-body image of chemiluminescence in our recent works provides a capability to image deep-tissue sites (> 4 cm) and consequently our optical imaging protocols can be utilized for the early diagnosis and identification of relatively deep tumor sites such as prostate cancer.

Everyone is welcome to the seminar. If you would like to meet with the speaker, please email brian.buma@ucdenver.edu.