Liposome: a tool to raise the Cherenkov radiation yield and to restore fluorophore properties in aqueous media†
Abstract
Liposomes used for the study were prepared and carefully characterized multiple times until all batches indicated the same characterization data (DOPC/cholesterol derivative (1 : 1.15 mol%), 14 mg(DOPC) mL−1, dDLS = 130 nm, 2 × 1011 liposome per nm3 of prepared batch, polydispersity index PDI = 0.1). The study shows that such a liposome suspension raises the yield in Cherenkov Radiation (CR) by 1.6-fold when in presence of [68Ga]-GaCl3, an efficient CR emitter (beta particle energy Eβ+ = 1800 KeV). Also, liposomes were found to prevent aggregation of a water-soluble phthalocyanine-pyranine PcPy4 dyad upon encapsulation, leading to its spectacular fluorescence restoration. Altogether, upon efficient 68Ga-radiolabelling of NODAGA-chelate immobilized at the liposome surface (99% radiolabelling yield, radio-TLC showed) encapsulating PcPy4 dyad (Caverage = 97 μM, Clumen = 300 μM), subsequent Cherenkov Radiation Energy Transfer (CRET) at the dyad antenna occurred. Internal energy transfers and fluorescence emission from the emitter dyad led to a 2.6-fold raise in radiance measured in the near-infrared (NIR) window (i.e. ca. 400 nm pseudo-Stokes shift). A similar raise in radiance was measured in the green window when encapsulation was achieved with eosin at the same rate. Liposome were found to be stable in PBS over 7 days regardless of the encapsulated fluorophore (no raise in dDLS diameter, no release of encapsulated dyes measured after Sephadex and FPLC repurification sequence), with some decay over 22 hours in a PBS/fetal calf serum mixture (1 : 1 vol.).