Acceptor Planarization and Donor Rotation: A Facile Strategy for Realizing Synergistic Cancer Phototherapy via Type I PDT and PTT.
Lina FengChunbin LiLingxiu LiuZhiyi WangZihan ChenJia YuWeiwei JiGuoyu JiangPengfei ZhangJianguo WangBen-Zhong TangPublished in: ACS nano (2022)
Tumor hypoxia seriously impairs the therapeutic outcomes of type II photodynamic therapy (PDT), which is highly dependent upon tissue oxygen concentration. Herein, a facile strategy of acceptor planarization and donor rotation is proposed to design type I photosensitizers (PSs) and photothermal reagents. Acceptor planarization can not only enforce intramolecular charge transfer to redshift NIR absorption but also transfer the type of PSs from type II to type I photochemical pathways. Donor rotation optimizes photothermal conversion efficiency (PCE). Accordingly, three 3,6-divinyl-substituted diketopyrrolopyrrole (DPP) derivatives, 2TPAVDPP, TPATPEVDPP, and 2TPEVDPP, with different number of rotors were prepared. Experimental results showed that three compounds were excellent type I PSs, and the corresponding 2TPEVDPP nanoparticles (NPs) with the most rotors possessed the highest PCE. The photophysical properties of 2TPEVDPP NPs are particularly suitable for in vivo NIR fluorescence imaging-guided synergistic PDT/PTT therapy. The proposed strategy is helpful for exploiting type I phototherapeutic reagents with high efficacy for synergistic PDT and PTT.
Keyphrases
- photodynamic therapy
- fluorescence imaging
- energy transfer
- cancer therapy
- solar cells
- quantum dots
- papillary thyroid
- highly efficient
- reduced graphene oxide
- drug delivery
- type diabetes
- endothelial cells
- squamous cell carcinoma
- stem cells
- metabolic syndrome
- molecular docking
- mesenchymal stem cells
- young adults
- skeletal muscle
- cell therapy
- drug release
- weight loss
- walled carbon nanotubes