posted on 2024-05-02, 13:34authored byRananjaya
S. Gamage, Bradley D. Smith
Indocyanine Blue (ICB) is the deep-red pentamethine analogue
of
the widely used clinical near-infrared heptamethine cyanine dye Indocyanine
Green (ICG). The two fluorophores have the same number of functional
groups and molecular charge and vary only by a single vinylene unit
in the polymethine chain, which produces a predictable difference
in spectral and physicochemical properties. We find that the two dyes
can be employed as a complementary pair in diverse types of fundamental
and applied fluorescence imaging experiments. A fundamental fluorescence
spectroscopy study used ICB and ICG to test a recently proposed Förster
Resonance Energy Transfer (FRET) mechanism for enhanced fluorescence
brightness in heavy water (D2O). The results support two
important corollaries of the proposal: (a) the strategy of using heavy
water to increase the brightness of fluorescent dyes for microscopy
or imaging is most effective when the dye emission band is above 650
nm, and (b) the magnitude of the heavy water florescence enhancement
effect for near-infrared ICG is substantially diminished when the
ICG surface is dehydrated due to binding by albumin protein. Two applied
fluorescence imaging studies demonstrated how deep-red ICB can be
combined with a near-infrared fluorophore for paired agent imaging
in the same living subject. One study used dual-channel mouse imaging
to visualize increased blood flow in a model of inflamed tissue, and
a second mouse tumor imaging study simultaneously visualized the vasculature
and cancerous tissue in separate fluorescence channels. The results
suggest that ICB and ICG can be incorporated within multicolor fluorescence
imaging methods for perfusion imaging and hemodynamic characterization
of a wide range of diseases.