Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9785572 | Optics Communications | 2005 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
A fluorescent probe based on bionanoparticle cowpea mosaic virus has been developed for near-infrared fluorescence tomography. A unique advantage of this probe is that over 30 dye molecules can be loaded onto each viral nanoparticle with an average diameter of 30Â nm, making high local dye concentration (â¼1.8Â mM) possible without significant fluorescence quenching. This ability of high loading of local dye concentration would increase the signal-to-noise ratio considerably, thus sensitivity for detection. We demonstrate successful tomographic fluorescence imaging of a target containing the virus-dye nanoparticles embedded in a tissue-like phantom. Tomographic fluorescence data were obtained through a multi-channel frequency-domain system and the spatial maps of fluorescence quantum yield were recovered with a finite-element-based reconstruction algorithm.
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Authors
Changfeng Wu, Hannah Barnhill, Xiaoping Liang, Qian Wang, Huabei Jiang,