In
this paper, we present a novel charge-free fluorescence-switchable
near-infrared (IR) dye based on merocyanine for target specific imaging.
In contrast to the typical bathochromic shift approach by extending
π-conjugation, the bathochromic shift of our merocyanine dye
to the near-IR region is due to an unusual S-cis diene conformer. This is the first example where a fluorescent
dye adopts the stable S-cis conformation.
In addition to the novel bathochromic shift mechanism, the dye exhibits
fluorescence-switchable properties in response to polarity and viscosity.
By incorporating a protein-specific ligand to the dye, the probes
(for SNAP-tag and hCAII proteins) exhibited dramatic fluorescence
increase (up to 300-fold) upon binding with its target protein. The
large fluorescence enhancement, near-IR absorption/emission, and charge-free
scaffold enabled no-wash and site-specific imaging of target proteins
in living cells and in vivo with minimum background fluorescence.
We believe that our unconventional approach for a near-IR dye with
the S-cis diene conformation can
lead to new strategies for the design of near-IR dyes.