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NIR-vis-Induced pH-Sensitive TiO2 Immobilized Carbon Dot for Controllable Membrane-Nuclei Targeting and Photothermal Therapy of Cancer Cells

Authors :
Seul Gi Kim
Sung Young Park
Suk Ho Bhang
Hyun Jeong Won
Gibaek Lee
Akhmad Irhas Robby
Gwang-Bum Im
Pham Thi My Phuong
Source :
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces. 12:37929-37942
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
American Chemical Society (ACS), 2020.

Abstract

This study investigated a selective and sensitive theragnosis system for the specific targeting of the membrane and nuclei based on visible-light and pH-responsive TiO2-integrated cross-linked carbon dot (C-CD/TiO2) for tumor detection and controllable photothermal therapy. The cross-linking system was formed by boronate ester linkages between the TiO2-immobilized Dopa-decyl (D-CD) and zwitterionic-formed CD (Z-CD) for nuclear targeting, which showed fluorescence "off" at physiological pH. The fluorescence recovered to the "on" state in acidic cancer cells owing to cleavages of the boronate ester bonds, resulting in the disruption of the Forster resonance energy transfer that generated different CDs useful for tumor-selective biosensors and therapy. D-CD, which is hydrophobic, can penetrate the hydrophobic sites of the cell membrane; it caused a loss in the hydrophobicity of these sites after visible-light irradiation. This was achieved by the photocatalytic activity of the TiO2 modulating energy bandgap, whereas the Z-CD targeted the nucleus, as confirmed by merged confocal microscopy images. D-CD augmented by photothermal heat also exhibited selective anticancer activity in the acidic tumor condition but showed only minimal effects at a normal site at pH 7.4. After C-CD/TiO2 injection to an in vivo tumor model, C-CD/TiO2 efficiently ablated tumors under NIR light irradiation. The C-CD/TiO2 group showed up-regulation of the pro-apoptotic markers such as P53 and BAX in tumor. This material exhibited its potential as a theragnostic sensor with excellent biocompatibility, high sensitivity, selective imaging, and direct anticancer activity via photothermal therapy.

Details

ISSN :
19448252 and 19448244
Volume :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........c673ca900396ee2d517d5edbf8b31880
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/acsami.0c11979