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Monday, January 13, 2020

Real-Time Monitoring of Temperature Variations around a Gold Nanobipyramid Targeted Cancer Cell under Photothermal Heating by Actively Manipulating an Optically Trapped Luminescent Upconversion Microparticle

Ya-Feng Kang, Bei Zheng, Cheng-Yu Li, Zhi-Ling Zhang, Hong-Wu Tang, Qiong-Shui Wu, Dai-Wen Pang

We demonstrate an effective approach to realize active and real-time temperature monitoring around the gold nanobipyramids (AuNBPs)-labeled cancer cell under 808 nm laser irradiation by combining optical tweezers and temperature-sensitive upconversion microparticles (UCMPs). On the one hand, the aptamer-modified AuNBPs that absorb laser at 808 nm not only act as an excellent photothermal reagent but also accurately and specifically bind the target cancer cells. On the other hand, the single optically trapped NaYF4:Yb3+, Er3+ UCMPs with a 980 nm laser exhibit temperature-dependent luminescence properties, where the intensity ratio of emission 525 and 547 nm varies with the ambient temperature. Therefore, real-time temperature variation monitoring is performed by 3D manipulation of the trapped single UCMP to control its distance from the AuNBPs-labeled cancer cell while being photothermally killed. The results show distance-related thermal propagation because the temperature increase reaches as high as 10 °C at a distance of 5 μm from the cell, whereas the temperature difference drops rapidly to 5 °C when this distance increases to 15 μm. This approach shows that the photothermal conversion from AuNBPs is sufficient to kill the cancer cells, and the temperature increase can be controlled within the micrometer level at a certain period of time. Overall, we present a micrometer-size thermometer platform and provide an innovative strategy to measure temperature at the micrometer level during photothermal killing of cancer cells.

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