Skip to main navigation Skip to search Skip to main content

Rare Earths-Doped and Ceria-Coated Strontium Aluminate Platelets─Versatile Luminescent Platforms for Correlated Lifetime Imaging by Multiphoton FLIM and PLIM

David G. Calatayud, María Victoria Martín Arroyo, Amador C. Caballero, Marina Villegas, Haobo Ge, Stanley W. Botchway, Sofia Pascu, Marco Peiteado, Teresa Jardiel

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1   Link opens in a new tab Citation (SciVal)

Abstract

We report our recent advances in the design and synthesis of functional and hybrid composite nanomaterials with properties geared toward life sciences assays and as platforms for biomedical imaging applications. Using a stepwise reverse micelle procedure, we synthesized hybrid platelets comprising rare earth-doped strontium aluminate cores labeled Eu,Dy:SrAlO, where the phase nominally denoted as Sr0.95Eu0.02Dy0.03Al2O4 dominates the nature of the composite, as demonstrated by extensive X-ray diffraction investigations. These were coated with a biocompatible cerium oxide shell, giving rise to the hierarchical hybrids denoted CeO2@Eu,Dy:SrAlO. Such Eu/Dy codoped strontium aluminates exhibit broad luminescent emissions with high optical sensitivity. The CeO2 shell further imparts biocompatibility and water dispersibility, resulting in kinetically stable nanoplatelets which can translocate into living cells in lifetime imaging protocols that were optimized for imaging across nano- and microscales. Multiphoton fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (MP FLIM) confirmed the luminescent properties in thin films and living cellular environments. These nanohybrids represent a significant step forward in the development of functional molecules and materials, leveraging directed and self-assembly strategies for their synthesis. Their luminescence (detectable by fluorescence as well as phosphorescence emission intensity correlated with emission lifetime), negligible toxicity on the time scale of imaging assays and up to 72 h, and biocompatibility with cellular milieu enabled their tracing with living cells. Their cellular activity was estimated by standard MTT assays in PC-3 and provided a further insight into their behavior in biological environments. The inclusion of heavy cerium and strontium atoms enhanced X-ray attenuation, supporting multimodal imaging by integrating optical and X-ray-based methods, which paves the way for potential applications in computed tomography correlated to confocal microscopy coupled with fluorescence lifetime imaging. These findings highlight the versatility of these luminescent hybrids for bioimaging and as synthetic scaffolds toward nanomedicine applications, bridging advanced imaging modalities with functional materials design.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)19950-19965
Number of pages16
JournalACS OMEGA
Volume10
Issue number19
Early online date29 Apr 2025
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 20 May 2025

Funding

This work was funded by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 under project PID2019-104118RB-C21. We thank Laserlab Europe and STFC for access to OCTOPUS facilities (App No: 20230032). S.I.P. thanks the ERC for funding through the Consolidator Grant O2Sense (617107), ERC PoC Tools-To-Sense (963937). S.I.P. also thanks the following grants for funding: STFC CDN+ Biosensing and NIR Imaging of New Biomarkers for Prostate Cancer, BBSRC (BB/W019655/1: Multi User High- Content Confocal Fluorescence Microscope); EP/K0171 60/1: \u201CNew manufacturable approaches to the deposition and patterning of graphene materials\u201D; EP/L016354/1: EPSRC Centre for Doctoral Training in Sustainable Chemical Technologies EP/G03768X/1: Doctoral Training Centre in Sustainable Chemical Technologies. D.G.C. thanks the Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovacion y Universidades (Spain) for funding (TED2021132779B-100 and TED2021-129876B-I00). The authors gratefully acknowledge the collaborative support from Professor Charareh Pourzand for training in cellular assays, and for use of her cell culturing laboratories. The University of Bath (SIP, HG) and MC2 and Core Research Facilities are acknowledged for use of their facilities.

FundersFunder number
Laserlab-Europe
University of Bath
ERC PoC Tools-To-Sense963937
Science and Technology Facilities Council20230032
Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y UniversidadesTED2021-129876B-I00, TED2021132779B-100
European Research Council617107
Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research CouncilBB/W019655/1, EP/L016354/1, EP/K0171 60/1
EPSRC Centre for Doctoral Training in Sustainable Chemical TechnologiesEP/G03768X/1

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Rare Earths-Doped and Ceria-Coated Strontium Aluminate Platelets─Versatile Luminescent Platforms for Correlated Lifetime Imaging by Multiphoton FLIM and PLIM'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this