Rational Design of NIR-II Emitting Conjugated Polymer Derived Nanoparticles for Image-Guided Cancer Interventions


Journal article


Nikita Gill, Indrajit Srivastava, Joshua Tropp
Adv. Health. Mater., Early View, 2024, p. 2401297


Cite

Cite

APA   Click to copy
Gill, N., Srivastava, I., & Tropp, J. (2024). Rational Design of NIR-II Emitting Conjugated Polymer Derived Nanoparticles for Image-Guided Cancer Interventions. Adv. Health. Mater., Early View, 2401297. https://doi.org/10.1002/adhm.202401297


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Gill, Nikita, Indrajit Srivastava, and Joshua Tropp. “Rational Design of NIR-II Emitting Conjugated Polymer Derived Nanoparticles for Image-Guided Cancer Interventions.” Adv. Health. Mater. Early View (2024): 2401297.


MLA   Click to copy
Gill, Nikita, et al. “Rational Design of NIR-II Emitting Conjugated Polymer Derived Nanoparticles for Image-Guided Cancer Interventions.” Adv. Health. Mater., vol. Early View, 2024, p. 2401297, doi:10.1002/adhm.202401297.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{nikita2024a,
  title = {Rational Design of NIR-II Emitting Conjugated Polymer Derived Nanoparticles for Image-Guided Cancer Interventions},
  year = {2024},
  journal = {Adv. Health. Mater.},
  pages = {2401297},
  volume = {Early View},
  doi = {10.1002/adhm.202401297},
  author = {Gill, Nikita and Srivastava, Indrajit and Tropp, Joshua}
}

Due to the reduced absorption, light scattering, and tissue autofluorescence in the NIR-II (1000–1700 nm) region, significant efforts are underway to explore diverse material platforms for in vivo fluorescence imaging, particularly for cancer diagnostics and image-guided interventions. Of the reported imaging agents, nanoparticles derived from conjugated polymers (CPNs) offer unique advantages to alternative materials including biocompatibility, remarkable absorption cross-sections, exceptional photostability, and tunable emission behavior independent of cell labeling functionalities. Herein, the current state of NIR-II emitting CPNs are summarized and structure–function–property relationships are highlighted that can be used to elevate the performance of next-generation CPNs. Methods for particle processing and incorporating cancer targeting modalities are discussed, as well as detailed characterization methods to improve interlaboratory comparisons of novel materials. Contemporary methods to specifically apply CPNs for cancer diagnostics and therapies are then highlighted. This review not only summarizes the current state of the field, but offers future directions and provides clarity to the advantages of CPNs over other classes of imaging agents.

Share



Follow this website


You need to create an Owlstown account to follow this website.


Sign up

Already an Owlstown member?

Log in