Light-emitting particles offer new approach to biological imaging.
For certain frequencies of short-wave infrared light, most biological tissues are nearly as transparent as glass. Now, researchers have made tiny particles that can be injected into the body, where they emit those penetrating frequencies. The advance may provide a new way of making detailed images of internal body structures such as fine networks of blood vessels.
The new findings, based on the use of light-emitting particles called quantum dots, is described in a paper in the journal Nature Biomedical Engineering, by MIT researcher Oliver Bruns and members of MIT’s departments of chemistry, chemical engineering, biological engineering and mechanical engineering.
Near-infrared imaging for research on biological tissues, with wavelengths between 700 and 900 nm, is widely used, but wavelengths of around 1,000 to 2,000 nm have the potential to provide even better results, because body tissues are more transparent to that light. “We knew that this imaging mode would be better” than existing methods, Bruns explained, “but we were lacking high-quality emitters.”
Light-emitting particles have been a specialty of Moungi Bawendi, a professor of chemistry, whose lab has developed new ways of making quantum dots over the years. These nanocrystals, made of semiconductor materials, emit light whose frequency can be precisely tuned by controlling the exact size and composition of the particles.
The key was to develop versions of these quantum dots with emissions that matched the desired short-wave infrared frequencies and which were bright enough to then be easily detected through the surrounding skin and muscle tissues. The team succeeded in making particles that are “orders of magnitude better than previous materials, and that allow unprecedented detail in biological imaging,” Bruns said.
The quantum dots the team produced are so bright that their emissions can be captured with very short exposure times. This makes it possible to produce not just single images but video that captures details of motion, such as the flow of blood, making it possible to distinguish between veins and arteries.
The new light-emitting particles are also the first that are bright enough to allow imaging of internal organs in mice that are awake and moving, as opposed to previous methods that required them to be anesthetized, Bruns said.
Initial applications would be for preclinical research in animals, as the compounds contain some materials that are unlikely to be approved for use in humans. However, the researchers are also working on developing versions that would be safer for humans.
The method also relies on the use of a newly developed camera that is highly sensitive to this particular range of short-wave infrared light. The camera is a commercially developed product, Bruns said, but his team was the first customer for the camera’s specialized detector, made of indium-gallium-arsenide.
Though this camera was developed for research purposes, these frequencies of infrared light are also used as a way of seeing through fog or smoke.
Not only can the new method determine the direction of blood flow, it is detailed enough to track individual blood cells within that flow. “We can track the flow in each and every capillary, at super high speed,” Bruns said. “We can get a quantitative measure of flow, and we can do such flow measurements at very high resolution, over large areas.”
Such imaging could potentially be used, for example, to study how the blood flow pattern in a tumor changes as the tumor develops, which might lead to new ways of monitoring disease progression or responsiveness to a drug treatment. “This could give a good indication of how treatments are working that was not possible before,” Bruns added.
For more on quantum dots, find out why Mass Production of Carbon-Based Quantum Dots is Coming Soon.