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Oxygen-independent organic photosensitizer with ultralow-power NIR photoexcitation for tumor-specific photodynamic therapy.

Authors :
Tang, Yufu
Tang, Yufu
Li, Yuanyuan
Li, Bowen
Song, Wentao
Qi, Guobin
Tian, Jianwu
Huang, Wei
Fan, Quli
Liu, Bin
Tang, Yufu
Tang, Yufu
Li, Yuanyuan
Li, Bowen
Song, Wentao
Qi, Guobin
Tian, Jianwu
Huang, Wei
Fan, Quli
Liu, Bin
Source :
Nature Communications; vol 15, iss 1
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Photodynamic therapy (PDT) is a promising cancer treatment but has limitations due to its dependence on oxygen and high-power-density photoexcitation. Here, we report polymer-based organic photosensitizers (PSs) through rational PS skeleton design and precise side-chain engineering to generate •O2- and •OH under oxygen-free conditions using ultralow-power 808 nm photoexcitation for tumor-specific photodynamic ablation. The designed organic PS skeletons can generate electron-hole pairs to sensitize H2O into •O2- and •OH under oxygen-free conditions with 808 nm photoexcitation, achieving NIR-photoexcited and oxygen-independent •O2- and •OH production. Further, compared with commonly used alkyl side chains, glycol oligomer as the PS side chain mitigates electron-hole recombination and offers more H2O molecules around the electron-hole pairs generated from the hydrophobic PS skeletons, which can yield 4-fold stronger •O2- and •OH production, thus allowing an ultralow-power photoexcitation to yield high PDT effect. Finally, the feasibility of developing activatable PSs for tumor-specific photodynamic therapy in female mice is further demonstrated under 808 nm irradiation with an ultralow-power of 15 mW cm-2. The study not only provides further insights into the PDT mechanism but also offers a general design guideline to develop an oxygen-independent organic PS using ultralow-power NIR photoexcitation for tumor-specific PDT.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Nature Communications; vol 15, iss 1
Notes :
application/pdf, Nature Communications vol 15, iss 1
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1432082795
Document Type :
Electronic Resource