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Photodynamic Nanophotosensitizers: Promising Materials for Tumor Theranostics.

Rajendiran KeerthigaZizhen ZhaoDe-Sheng PeiAiling Fu
Published in: ACS biomaterials science & engineering (2020)
Photodynamic theranostics/therapy (PDT) is a potential strategy for selectively imaging malignant sites and treating cancer via a non-invasive therapeutic method. Photosensitizers, the crucial components of PDT, enable colocalization of photons and light, and photon/light therapy in the therapeutic window of 400-900 nm exhibits photocytotoxicity to tumor cells. Due to their high biostability and photocytotoxicity, nanophotosensitizers (NPSs) are of much interest for malignant tumor theranostics at present. NPS-activated photons transfer energy through the absorption of a photon and convert molecular oxygen to the singlet reactive oxygen species, which leads to apoptosis and necrosis. Moreover, NPSs modified by polymers, including PLGA, PEG-PLA, PDLLA, PVCL-g-PLA, and P(VCL-co-VIM)-g-PLA, exhibit excellent biocompatibility, and a tumor-targeting molecule linked on the nanoparticle surface can precisely deliver NPSs into the tumor region. The development of NPSs will accelerate the progress in tumor theranostics through the photon/light pathway.
Keyphrases
  • photodynamic therapy
  • reactive oxygen species
  • cancer therapy
  • drug delivery
  • living cells
  • mesenchymal stem cells
  • climate change
  • cell therapy
  • fluorescence imaging
  • smoking cessation
  • lymph node metastasis