A Cascade BIME-Triggered Near-IR Cyanine Nanoplatform for Enhanced Antibacterial Photodynamic Therapy.
Baoxuan HuangChen ZhangJia TianQi-Wei TianGang HuangHongman ZhangPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2023)
The long-standing misuse of antibiotics has accelerated the emergence of drug-resistant bacteria, which gives rise to an urgent public health threat. Antibacterial photodynamic therapy (aPDT), as a burgeoning and promising antibacterial strategy, plays an essential role in avoiding the evolution of drug-resistant microbes. However, it is hard for conventional photosensitizers to achieve satisfactory antibacterial efficacy because of the complex bacterial infectious microenvironment (BIME). Herein, a cascade BIME-triggered near-infrared cyanine ( HA-CY ) nanoplatform has been developed via conjugating cyanine units to biocompatible hyaluronic acid (HA) for enhanced aPDT efficacy. The HA-CY nanoparticles can be dissociated under the overexpressed hyaluronidase in BIME to release a cyanine photosensitizer. Meanwhile, cyanine can be protonated under acidic BIME, where protonated cyanine can efficiently adhere to the surface of a negatively charged bacterial membrane and increase singlet oxygen production due to intramolecular charge transfer (ICT). Experiments in the cellular level and animal model proved that the BIME-triggered activation of aPDT could remarkably boost aPDT efficacy. Overall, this BIME-triggered HA-CY nanoplatform presents great promise for overcoming the dilemma of drug-resistant microbes.
Keyphrases
- drug resistant
- photodynamic therapy
- hyaluronic acid
- multidrug resistant
- acinetobacter baumannii
- fluorescence imaging
- public health
- silver nanoparticles
- stem cells
- anti inflammatory
- essential oil
- wound healing
- machine learning
- chronic pain
- cancer therapy
- drug release
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- drug delivery
- cystic fibrosis
- energy transfer
- quantum dots
- electron transfer