Natural-Killer-Cell-Inspired Nanorobots with Aggregation-Induced Emission Characteristics for Near-Infrared-II Fluorescence-Guided Glioma Theranostics.
Guanjun DengXinghua PengZhihong SunWei ZhengJia YuLulu DuHuajie ChenPing GongPengfei ZhangLintao CaiBen-Zhong TangPublished in: ACS nano (2020)
Nature has always inspired robotic designs and concepts. It is conceivable that biomimic nanorobots will soon play a prominent role in medicine. The "Terminator" in the science fiction film is a cybernetic organism with living tissue over a metal endoskeleton, which inspired us to develop natural-killer-cell-mimic nanorobots with aggregation-induced emission (AIE) characteristics (NK@AIEdots) by coating a natural kill cell membrane on an AIE-active polymeric endoskeleton, PBPTV, a highly bright NIR-II AIE-active conjugated polymer. Owing to the AIE and soft-matter characteristics of PBPTV, as-prepared NK@AIEdots maintained a superior NIR-II brightness (quantum yield ∼7.9% in water) and good biocompatibility. Besides, they can serve as a tight junction (TJ) modulator to trigger an intracellular signaling cascade, causing TJ disruption and actin cytoskeleton reorganization to form an intercellular "green channel" to help them to cross the blood-brain barrier (BBB) silently. Furthermore, they can initiatively accumulate in glioblastoma cells in the complex brain matrix for high-contrast and through-skull tumor imaging. The tumor growth was also greatly inhibited by these NK@AIEdots under the NIR light illumination. As far as we know, the quantum yield of PBPTV is the highest among the existing NIR-II luminescent conjugated polymers. Besides, the NK-cell biomimetic nanorobots showed great potential for BBB-crossing active delivery.
Keyphrases
- cell death
- nk cells
- fluorescent probe
- photodynamic therapy
- living cells
- blood brain barrier
- drug release
- fluorescence imaging
- single cell
- energy transfer
- cell therapy
- induced apoptosis
- molecular dynamics
- drug delivery
- high resolution
- magnetic resonance
- public health
- single molecule
- risk assessment
- stem cells
- cancer therapy
- magnetic resonance imaging
- quantum dots
- minimally invasive
- oxidative stress
- brain injury
- signaling pathway
- room temperature
- metal organic framework
- tissue engineering
- solid state
- human health
- multiple sclerosis
- robot assisted