Recent Process of NIR-type AIE-active Fluorescent Materials for
Biomedical Applications of Fluorescent Imaging and Phototherapeutics
Abstract
Near-infrared red (NIR) fluorescence imaging guided phototherapeutics
hold a great promise for deep tissue imaging and tumor treatment.
Organic photosensitizers (PSs) serves as one of the most important parts
in the process of optical diagnosis and therapy, among which those
having strong absorption and fluorescence at the region of NIR spectrum
have always attracted tremendous research interests because of numerous
merits of deep penetration, diminished tissue autofluorescence, reduced
tissue absorption and scattering, minimal phototoxicity, better
spatiotemporal controllability and almost no drug resistance. Recently,
aggregation-induced emission active agents (AIEgens) with NIR optical
property develop rapidly because of the advantages of aggregation
enhance simultaneously the efficiency of fluorescence, reactive oxygen
species (ROS) and photothermal conversion. Recent efforts in designing
molecular structures of NIR-type AIEgens and developing advanced
therapeutic applications have achieved a series of breakthroughs. In
this review, the materials designing and biomedical applications of
NIR-type AIEgens are summarized. Starting with the introduction of
general design theory of AIEgens and NIR property, recent efforts in
developing various NIR-type AIE-active PSs for different biomedical
applications including vascular bioimaging and single phototherapeutic
and their synergistic therapy are then discussed. Finally, perspectives
and challenges in the field of NIR-type AIEgens are outlooked. This
review is expected to promote the development of newly emerging NIR-type
AIEgens in biomedical applications for future clinical translation.