Back to Search Start Over

Supramolecular red-light-photosensitized nitric oxide release with fluorescence self-reporting within biocompatible nanocarriers.

Authors :
Laneri F
Parisi C
Seggio M
Fraix A
Longobardi G
Catanzano O
Quaglia F
Sortino S
Source :
Journal of materials chemistry. B [J Mater Chem B] 2024 Jul 03; Vol. 12 (26), pp. 6500-6508. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Jul 03.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The strict dependence of the biological effects of nitric oxide (NO) on its concentration and generation site requires this inorganic free radical to be delivered with precise spatiotemporal control. Light-activation by suitable NO photoprecursors represents an ideal approach. Developing strategies to activate NO release using long-wavelength excitation light in the therapeutic window (650-1300 nm) is challenging. In this contribution, we demonstrate that NO release by a blue-light activatable NO photodonor (NOPD) with self-fluorescence reporting can be triggered catalytically by the much more biocompatible red light exploiting a supramolecular photosensitization process. Different red-light absorbing photosensitizers (PSs) are co-entrapped with the NOPD within different biocompatible nanocarriers such as Pluronic® micelles, microemulsions and branched cyclodextrin polymers. The intra-carrier photosensitized NO release, involving the lowest, long-lived triplet state of the PS as the key intermediate and its quenching by the NOPD, is competitive with that by molecular oxygen. This allows NO to be released with good efficacy, even under aerobic conditions. Therefore, the adopted general strategy provides a valuable tool for generating NO from an already available NOPD, otherwise activatable with the poorly biocompatible blue light, without requiring any chemical modification and using sophisticated and expensive irradiation sources.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2050-7518
Volume :
12
Issue :
26
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of materials chemistry. B
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38873736
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1039/d4tb00325j