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An All-rounder for NIR-II Phototheranostics: Well-Tailored 1064 nm Excitable Molecule for Photothermal Combating Orthotopic Breast Cancer.

Angewandte Chemie 2024 April 19
The second near-infrared (NIR-II, 1000-1700 nm) light-activated organic photothermal agent that synchronously enables satisfying NIR-II fluorescence imaging is highly warranted yet rather challenging on the basis of the overwhelming nonradiative decay. Herein, such an agent, namely TPABT-TD, was tactfully designed and constructed via employing benzo[c]thiophene moiety as bulky electron donor/π-bridge and tailoring the peripheral molecular rotors. Benefitting from its high electron donor-acceptor strength and finely modulated intramolecular motion, TPABT-TD simultaneously exhibits ultralong absorption in NIR-II region, intense fluorescence emission in the NIR-IIa (1300-1500 nm) region as nanoaggregates, and high photothermal conversion upon 1064 nm laser irradiation. Those intrinsic advantages endow TPABT-TD nanoparticles with prominent fluorescence/photoacoustic/photothermal trimodal imaging-guided NIR-II photothermal therapy against orthotopic 4T1 breast tumor with negligible adverse effect.

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