Lipid droplets (LDs)
with unique interfacial architecture not only play crucial roles in
protecting a cell from lipotoxicity and lipoapoptosis but also closely
relate with many diseases such as fatty liver and diabetes. Thus,
as one of the important applied biomaterials, fluorescent probes with
ultrahigh selectivity for in situ and high-fidelity imaging of LDs
in living cells and tissues are critical to elucidate relevant physiological
and pathological events as well as detect related diseases. However,
available probes only utilizing LDs’ waterless neutral cores
but ignoring the unique phospholipid monolayer interfaces exhibit
low selectivity. They cannot differentiate neutral cores of LDs from
intracellular other lipophilic microenvironments, which results in
extensively cloud-like background noise and severely limited their
bioapplications. Herein, to design LD probes with ultrahigh selectivity,
the exceptional interfacial architecture of LDs is considered adequately
and thus an interface-targeting strategy is proposed for the first
time. According to the novel strategy, we have developed two amphipathic
fluorescent probes (N-Cy and N-Py) by introducing
different cations into a lipophilic fluorophore (nitrobenzoxadiazole
(NBD)). Consequently, their cationic moiety precisely locates the
interfaces through electrostatic interaction and simultaneously NBD
entirely embeds into the waterless core via hydrophobic interaction.
Thus, high-fidelity and background-free fluorescence imaging of LDs
are expectably realized in living cells in situ. Moreover, LDs in
turbid tissues like skeletal muscle slices have been clearly imaged
(up to 82 μm depth) by a two-photon microscope. Importantly,
using N-Cy, we not only intuitively monitored the variations
of LDs in number, size, and morphology but also clearly revealed their
abnormity in hepatic tissues resulting from fatty liver. Therefore,
these unique probes provide excellent imaging tools for elucidating
LD-related physiological and pathological processes and the interface-targeting
strategy possesses universal significance for designing probes with ultrahigh selectivity.