Hyperthermia and Controllable Free Radical Coenhanced Synergistic Therapy in Hypoxia Enabled by Near-Infrared-II Light Irradiation.
Jun YangRui XieLili FengBin LiuRuichan LvChunxia LiShili GaiFei HePiaoping YangJun LinPublished in: ACS nano (2019)
Tumor cell metabolism and tumor blood vessel proliferation are distinct from normal cells. The resulting tumor microenvironment presents a characteristic of hypoxia, which greatly limits the generation of oxygen free radicals and affects the therapeutic effect of photodynamic therapy. Here, we developed an oxygen-independent free radical generated nanosystem (CuFeSe2-AIPH@BSA) with dual-peak absorption in both near-infrared (NIR) regions and utilized it for imaging-guided synergistic treatment. The special absorption provides the nanosystem with high photothermal conversion efficiency and favorably matched photoactivity in both I and II NIR biological windows. Upon NIR light irradiation, the generated heat could prompt AIPH release and decompose to produce oxygen-independent free radicals for killing cancer cells effectively. The contrastive research results show that the enhanced therapeutic efficacy of NIR-II over NIR-I is principally due to its deeper tissue penetration and higher maximum permission exposure that benefits from a longer wavelength. Hyperthermia effect and the production of toxic free radicals upon NIR-II laser illumination are extremely effective in triggering apoptosis and death of cancer cells in the tumor hypoxia microenvironment. The high biocompatibility and excellent anticancer efficiency of CuFeSe2-AIPH@BSA allow it to be an ideal oxygen-independent nanosystem for imaging-guided and NIR-II-mediated synergistic therapy via systemic administration.
Keyphrases
- photodynamic therapy
- fluorescence imaging
- drug release
- fluorescent probe
- high resolution
- cell cycle arrest
- stem cells
- endothelial cells
- cancer therapy
- induced apoptosis
- oxidative stress
- drug delivery
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- mass spectrometry
- bone marrow
- cell therapy
- radiation therapy
- cell proliferation
- combination therapy
- heat stress