Issue 22, 2024

Reactive oxygen species-mediated organic long-persistent luminophores light up biomedicine: from two-component separated nano-systems to integrated uni-luminophores

Abstract

Organic luminophores have been widely utilized in cells and in vivo fluorescence imaging but face extreme challenges, including a low signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and even false signals, due to non-negligible background signals derived from real-time excitation lasers. To overcome these challenges, in the last decade, functionalized organic long-persistent luminophores have gained much attention. Such luminophores could not only overcome the biological toxicity of inorganic long-persistent luminescent materials (metabolic toxicity and leakage risk of inorganic heavy metals), but also continue to emit long-persistent luminescence after removing the excitation source, thus effectively improving imaging quality. More importantly, organic long-persistent luminophores have good structure tailorability for the construction of activable probes, which is favorable for biosensing. Recently, the development of reactive oxygen species (ROS)-mediated long-persistent (ROSLP) luminophores (especially organic small-molecule ROSLP luminophores) is still in the rising stage. Notably, ROSLP luminophores for in vivo imaging have experienced from two-component separated nano-systems to integrated uni-luminophores, which obtained gradually better designability and biocompatibility. In this review, we summarize the progress and challenges of organic long-persistent luminophores, focusing on their development history, long-persistent luminescence working mechanisms, and biomedical applications. We hope that these insights will help scientists further develop functionalized organic long-persistent luminophores for the biomedical field.

Graphical abstract: Reactive oxygen species-mediated organic long-persistent luminophores light up biomedicine: from two-component separated nano-systems to integrated uni-luminophores

Article information

Article type
Review Article
Submitted
11 Jul 2024
First published
04 Oct 2024

Chem. Soc. Rev., 2024,53, 11207-11227

Reactive oxygen species-mediated organic long-persistent luminophores light up biomedicine: from two-component separated nano-systems to integrated uni-luminophores

Z. Li, H. Liu and X. Zhang, Chem. Soc. Rev., 2024, 53, 11207 DOI: 10.1039/D4CS00443D

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