A new setup for direct microspectroscopic monitoring of singlet oxygen (1O2) has been developed in our laboratory using a novel near-infrared sensitive InGaAs 2D-array detector. An imaging spectrograph has been inserted in front of the 2D-array detector, which allows us to acquire spectral images where one dimension is spatial and the other is spectral. The work presents a detailed examination of sensitivity and noise characteristics of the setup and its ability to detect 1O2. The 1O2 phosphorescence-based images and near-infrared luminescence spectral images recorded from single TMPyP-containing fibroblast cells reflecting spectral changes during irradiation are demonstrated. The introduction of spectral images addresses the issue of a potential spectral overlap of 1O2 phosphorescence with near-infrared-extended luminescence of the photosensitizer and provides a powerful tool for distinguishing and separating them, which can be applied to any photosensitizer manifesting near-infrared luminescence. This journal is © the Partner Organisations 2014.
CITATION STYLE
Scholz, M., Dědic, R., Valenta, J., Breitenbach, T., & Hála, J. (2014). Real-time luminescence microspectroscopy monitoring of singlet oxygen in individual cells. Photochemical and Photobiological Sciences, 13(8), 1203–1212. https://doi.org/10.1039/c4pp00121d
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