Gold nanoclusters performing as contrast agents for non-invasive imaging of tissue-like phantoms via two-photon excited fluorescence lifetime imaging
Abstract
Recently, gold nanoclusters (AuNCs) have received considerable scientific interest due to their ability to generate intrinsic photoluminescence (PL), making them suitable for a wide range of applications, such as sensing, biolabeling and bioimaging. Fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM) is an extremely promising technique when it comes to tissue imaging, especially once combined with near-infrared two-photon excitation (TPE) due to deep tissue penetration and improved spatial resolution. In this paper, we carried out an innovative study on the ability of bovine serum albumin stabilized gold nanoclusters (BSA-AuNCs) to perform as reliable label-free contrast agents for the visualization of tissue-like agarose phantoms via TPE–FLIM. We prove that BSA-AuNCs exhibit uniform and reproducible TPE PL in the first biological window, when embedded in phantoms, under 820 nm excitation provided by a Ti:Sapphire pulsed laser. The two-photon origin of the emission signal inside the phantom is demonstrated by the quadratic dependence of the PL intensity on the excitation power. Moreover, we focused on the evaluation of BSA-AuNCs’ potential as contrast agents at different concentrations inside phantoms, simulating an ex vivo environment, at three NIR excitation wavelengths, in view of defining the optimal experimental conditions for future real-tissue imaging assays. The present study aims at translating our previous results on the successful performance of BSA-AuNCs as contrast agents for in vitro FLIM imaging, using visible light, towards non-invasive ex vivo NIR imaging applications. Besides the advantageous use of the combined techniques TPE–FLIM, the novelty of our work consists of demonstrating for the first time the capacity of BSA-AuNCs to perform as bright contrast agents inside cancer-tissue mimicking phantoms. We prove that BSA-AuNCs show great promise as fluorescent contrast agents for TPE–FLIM towards image-assisted tumor surgery.