Publications by authors named "Zhiqian Guo"

Polymer semiconductors have attracted much attention for photocatalytic hydrogen evolution, but they typically exhibit micrometer-sized particles in water-suspension, causing severe loss in light absorption and exciton recombination. Here a molecular nanophotocatalyst featuring a donor-acceptor motif is presented that solution is processed via a facile stirring nanoprecipitation method assisted by hydrophilic surfactants, enabling an efficient quasi-homogenous hydrogen evolution. In contrast to the original bulk powder (heterogeneous system), these quasi-homogenous nanophotocatalysts exhibit significantly improved light-harvesting, water-wettability, and exciton dissociation, resulting in distinctly enhanced (by four-order-of-magnitude) photocatalytic hydrogen evolution rate.

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Earthen sites in China are widely exposed to freeze-thaw environments. There is a lack of knowledge about the spatial distribution patterns of freeze-thaw deterioration and environments, as well as preventive conservation strategies and subsequent refined research on the freeze-thaw deterioration of earthen sites. In this study, the freeze-thaw deterioration process of earthen sites was divided into two periods.

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Photodynamic therapy (PDT) is a clinically approved therapeutic modality that has shown great potential for cancer treatment. However, there exist two major problems hindering PDT applications: the nonspecific phototoxicity requiring patients to stay in dark post-PDT, and the limited photodynamic efficiency. Herein, we report a photo-triggered porphyrin polyelectrolyte nanoassembling (photo-triggered PPN) strategy, in which porphyrin photosensitizer and photoswitchable energy accepter are assembled into polyelectrolyte micelles by a combined force of charge interaction and metal-ligand coordination.

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Article Synopsis
  • Organic-inorganic hybrid resists, like PMMA-AlO, enhance sensitivity and resolution compared to traditional organic photoresists by incorporating metal oxides into PMMA through a method called sequential infiltration synthesis (SIS).
  • The study optimized the number of SIS cycles (<23) and examined how different metal oxide amounts and distributions affect the resist's performance during electron beam exposure.
  • Results showed that using 20 SIS cycles resulted in optimal electron beam resolution (50 nm line width) while maintaining good pattern transfer due to the etching resistance of AlO, despite lower overall sensitivity compared to fewer SIS cycles.
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Reservoir is easy to be polluted by nutrients and heavy metals in the surrounding soil. There is a close relationship between heavy metals and nutrients in soil. Nutrient salts will affect the activity of heavy metals, and heavy metal pollution will affect plant growth and nutrient salt absorption, thus affecting ecosystem health.

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Article Synopsis
  • Singlet oxygen plays a crucial role in photodynamic therapy by helping to treat tumors and eliminate germs, but monitoring it effectively is challenging due to side reactions.
  • The authors present a zwitterionic strategy for creating ultra-stable near-infrared chemiluminescent probes that can accurately and specifically detect singlet oxygen through a reliable chemical reaction.
  • These new probes, QMI, outperform the existing commercial probe by over 40 times in terms of signal-to-noise ratio, making them highly sensitive, selective, and photostable—ideal for real-time tracking of photodynamic therapy in living organisms.
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Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a gastrointestinal immune disease that requires clear diagnosis, timely treatment, and lifelong monitoring. The diagnosis and monitoring methods of IBD mainly include endoscopy, imaging examination, and laboratory examination, which are constantly developed to achieve early definite diagnosis and accurate monitoring. In recent years, with the development of nanotechnology, the diagnosis and monitoring methods of IBD have been remarkably enriched.

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The interest in incorporating potatoes into wheat dough is increasing. However, potatoes exhibit significant viscosity during thermal processing, affecting product processing and quality. This study aims to find an effective method to reduce the viscosity of mashed potatoes.

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Cellular compartments provide confined environments for spatiotemporal control of biological processes and enzymatic reactions. To mimic such compartmentalization of eukaryotic cells, we report an efficient and general platform to precisely control the formation of artificial nanoreactors in single living cells. We introduce an electroosmotic controlled strategy for the synthesis of ZIF-8 at the nanoscale liquid-liquid interface around the tip of a nanopipet, whereby the formed ZIF-8 nanoparticles are driven into a single living cell by the electroosmotic flow.

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Dopamine (DA) is an important neurotransmitter, which not only participates in the regulation of neural processes but also plays critical roles in tumor progression and immunity. However, direct identification of DA-containing exosomes, as well as quantification of DA in single vesicles, is still challenging. Here, we report a nanopipette-assisted method to detect single exosomes and their dopamine contents via amperometric measurement.

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Article Synopsis
  • Glutathione (GSH) is essential for maintaining balance in oxidative processes, but tracking its levels deep in tissues has been challenging due to limitations in current visible fluorescence probes.
  • Researchers developed a new near-infrared fluorescence probe called Flav-N, which allows for real-time monitoring of GSH in cells and tissues through rapid reactions with biothiols.
  • Flav-N demonstrated quick response times (under 5 seconds) and was effective in tracking GSH levels in living mice, providing a valuable tool for studying the dynamics of endogenous GSH in biological processes.
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Herein, we design a novel "crossbreeding" dye (BC-OH) within the second near-infrared (NIR-II) window based on BODIPY and chromene chromophores. BC-OH can serve as a platform to construct activatable NIR-II probes with small spectral crosstalk, thereby making a breakthrough in imaging HO fluctuation in an APAP-induced liver injury model with high signal-to-background ratio.

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Objective: As the primary means of plant-induced haploid, anther culture is of great significance in quickly obtaining pure lines and significantly shortening the potato breeding cycle. Nevertheless, the methods of anther culture of tetraploid potato were still not well established.

Methods: In this study, 16 potato cultivars (lines) were used for anther culture .

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An ongoing revolution in fluorescence-based technologies has transformed the way we visualize and manipulate biological events. An enduring goal in this field is to explore high-performance fluorogenic scaffolds that show tunability and capability for analysis, especially for small-molecular near-infrared (NIR) fluorophores. We present a unique bent-to-planar rehybridization design strategy for NIR fluorogenic scaffolds, thus yielding a palette of switchable bent/planar Si-rhodamines that span from visible to NIR-II wavelengths.

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Uniting photothermal therapy (PTT) with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) holds great potential in nanotheranostics. However, the extensively utilized hydrophobicity-driven assembling strategy not only restricts the intramolecular motion-induced PTT, but also blocks the interactions between MR agents and water. Herein, we report an aggregation-induced emission luminogen (AIEgen)-mediated polyelectrolyte nanoassemblies (APN) strategy, which bestows a unique "soft" inner microenvironment with good water permeability.

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Fibrillar aggregates of the amyloid-β protein (Aβ) are the main component of the senile plaques found in brains of patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD). Development of probes allowing the noninvasive and high-fidelity mapping of Aβ plaques in vivo is critical for AD early detection, drug screening and biomedical research. QM-FN-SO (quinoline-malononitrile-thiophene-(dimethylamino)phenylsulfonate) is a near-infrared aggregation-induced-emission-active fluorescent probe capable of crossing the blood-brain barrier (BBB) and ultrasensitively lighting up Aβ plaques in living mice.

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Several aggregation-induced emission luminogens (AIEgens) with excellent water-solubility and near-infrared emission were designed and synthesized for wash-free "off-on" mitochondrial imaging and photodynamic therapy of HeLa cells. The AIEgen TEPP exhibits both bright near-infrared emission ( = 17.8%) and high hybrid ROS productivity (including OH˙ and O).

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Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC), as one of the most malignant tumors with dense desmoplastic stroma, forms a specific matrix barrier to hinder effective diagnosis and therapy. To date, a paramount challenge is in the search for intelligent nanotheranostics for such hypopermeable tumors, especially in breaking the PDAC-specific physical barrier. The unpredictable behaviors of nanotheranostics, that is, real-time tracking where, when, and how they cross the physical barriers and are taken up by tumor cells, are the major bottleneck.

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Cysteine (Cys) is well-known to be an important biothiol and related to many diseases. However, the in situ trapping of endogenous Cys is still handicapped by a lack of straightforward methods combined with long-wavelength emission and high-performance response. In this work, we described the rational design strategy of cyanine-based near-infrared (NIR) probes for the rapid detection of mitochondrial Cys in living cells and mice.

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The occurrence and transmission of chirality is a fascinating characteristic of nature. However, the intermolecular transmission efficiency of circularly polarized luminescence (CPL) remains challenging due to poor through-space energy transfer. We report a unique CPL transmission from inducing the achiral acceptor to emit CPL within a specific liquid crystal (LC)-based intermolecular system through a circularly polarized fluorescence resonance energy transfer (C-FRET), wherein the luminescent cholesteric LC is employed as the chirality donor, and rationally designed achiral long-wavelength aggregation-induced emission (AIE) fluorophore acts as the well-assembled acceptor.

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Although tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) maintain their ability to proliferate, persist, and eradicate tumors, they are frequently dysfunctional in situ. By performing both whole-genome CRISPR and metabolic inhibitor screens, we identify that nicotinamide phosphoribosyltransferase (NAMPT) is required for T cell activation. NAMPT is low in TILs, and its expression is controlled by the transcriptional factor Tubby (TUB), whose activity depends on the T cell receptor-phospholipase C gamma (TCR-PLCγ) signaling axis.

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Precise detection of cellular senescence may allow its role in biological systems to be evaluated more effectively, while supporting studies of therapeutic candidates designed to evade its detrimental effect on physical function. We report here studies of α-l-fucosidase (α-fuc) as a biomarker for cellular senescence and the development of an α-fuc-responsive aggregation induced emission (AIE) probe, termed designed to complement more conventional probes based on β-galactosidase (β-gal). Using , the onset of replicative-, reactive oxygen species (ROS)-, ultraviolet A (UVA)-, and drug-induced senescence could be probed effectively.

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β-Galactosidase (β-gal), a typical hydrolytic enzyme, is a vital biomarker for cell senescence and primary ovarian cancers. Developing precise and rapid methods to monitor β-gal activity is crucial for early cancer diagnoses and biological research. Over the past decade, activatable optical probes have become a powerful tool for real-time tracking and visualization with high sensitivity and specificity.

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Intramolecular charge transfer (ICT) is a fundamental mechanism that enables the development of numerous fluorophores and probes for bioimaging and sensing. However, the electron-withdrawing targets (EWTs)-induced fluorescence quenching is a long-standing and unsolved issue in ICT fluorophores, and significantly limits the widespread applicability. Here we report a simple and generalizable structural-modification for completely overturning the intramolecular rotation driving energy, and thus fully reversing the ICT fluorophores' quenching mode into light-up mode.

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The anti-Kasha process provides the possibility of using high-energy excited states to develop novel applications. Our previous research (Nature communications, 2020, 11, 793) has demonstrated a dual-emission anti-Kasha-active fluorophore for bioimaging application, which exhibits near-infrared emissions from the S state and visible anti-Kasha emissions from the S state. Here, we applied tunable blue-side femtosecond stimulated Raman spectroscopy (FSRS) and transient absorption spectroscopy, assisted by quantum calculations, to reveal the anti-Kasha dual emission mechanism, in which the emergence of two fluorescing states is due to the retardation of internal conversion from the S state to the S state.

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