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Photosensitizer-singlet oxygen sensor conjugated silica nanoparticles for photodynamic therapy and bioimaging.
Sobhanan, Jeladhara; Ono, Kenji; Okamoto, Takuya; Sawada, Makoto; Weiss, Paul S; Biju, Vasudevanpillai.
Afiliação
  • Sobhanan J; Graduate School of Environmental Science, Hokkaido University Sapporo Hokkaido 060-0810 Japan biju@es.hokudai.ac.jp.
  • Ono K; Department of Chemistry, Rice University Houston Texas 77005 USA.
  • Okamoto T; Research Institute of Environmental Medicine, Nagoya University Nagoya 464-8601 Japan.
  • Sawada M; Graduate School of Environmental Science, Hokkaido University Sapporo Hokkaido 060-0810 Japan biju@es.hokudai.ac.jp.
  • Weiss PS; Research Institute for Electronic Science, Hokkaido University Sapporo Hokkaido 001-0020 Japan.
  • Biju V; Research Institute of Environmental Medicine, Nagoya University Nagoya 464-8601 Japan.
Chem Sci ; 15(6): 2007-2018, 2024 Feb 07.
Article em En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38332815
ABSTRACT
Intracellular singlet oxygen (1O2) generation and detection help optimize the outcome of photodynamic therapy (PDT). Theranostics programmed for on-demand phototriggered 1O2 release and bioimaging have great potential to transform PDT. We demonstrate an ultrasensitive fluorescence turn-on sensor-sensitizer-RGD peptide-silica nanoarchitecture and its 1O2 generation-releasing-storing-sensing properties at the single-particle level or in living cells. The sensor and sensitizer in the nanoarchitecture are an aminomethyl anthracene (AMA)-coumarin dyad and a porphyrin or CdSe/ZnS quantum dots (QDs), respectively. The AMA in the dyad quantitatively quenches the fluorescence of coumarin by intramolecular electron transfer, the porphyrin or QD moiety generates 1O2, and the RGD peptide facilitates intracellular delivery. The small size, below 200 nm, as verified by scanning electron microscopy and differential light scattering measurements, of the architecture within the 1O2 diffusion length enables fast and efficient intracellular fluorescence switching by the tandem ultraviolet (UV)-visible or visible-near-infrared (NIR) photo-triggering. While the red emission and 1O2 generation by the porphyrin are continually turned on, the blue emission of coumarin is uncaged into 230-fold intensity enhancement by on-demand photo-triggering. The 1O2 production and release by the nanoarchitecture enable spectro-temporally controlled cell imaging and apoptotic cell death; the latter is verified from cytotoxic data under dark and phototriggering conditions. Furthermore, the bioimaging potential of the TCPP-based nanoarchitecture is examined in vivo in B6 mice.

Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2024 Tipo de documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2024 Tipo de documento: Article