Bornite (Cu5FeS4) nanocrystals as an ultrasmall biocompatible NIR-II contrast agent for photoacoustic imaging

Photoacoustics. 2024 Sep 17:40:100649. doi: 10.1016/j.pacs.2024.100649. eCollection 2024 Dec.

Abstract

In this study, we demonstrate the potential of the bornite crystal structure (Cu5FeS4) of copper iron sulfide as a second near infrared (NIR-II) photoacoustic (PA) contrast agent. Bornite exhibits comparable dose-dependent biocompatibility to copper sulfide nanoparticles in a cell viability study with HepG2 cells, while exhibiting a 10-fold increase in PA amplitude. In comparison to other benchmark contrast agents at similar mass concentrations, bornite demonstrated a 10× increase in PA amplitude compared to indocyanine green (ICG) and a 5× increase compared to gold nanorods (AuNRs). PA signal was detectable with a light pathlength greater than 5 cm in porcine tissue phantoms at bornite concentrations where in vitro cell viability was maintained. In vivo imaging of mice vasculature resulted in a 2× increase in PA amplitude compared to AuNRs. In summary, bornite is a promising NIR-II contrast agent for deep tissue PA imaging.

Keywords: Biocompatible; Contrast agent; Imaging depth; NIR-II; Semiconductor nanocrystals.