Oxygenic Hybrid Semiconducting Nanoparticles for Enhanced Photodynamic Therapy

Houjuan Zhu, Jingchao Li, Xiaoying Qi, Peng Chen*, Kanyi Pu

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

301 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Photodynamic nanotheranostics has shown great promise for cancer therapy; however, its therapeutic efficacy is limited due to the hypoxia of tumor microenvironment and the unfavorable bioavailability of existing photodynamic agents. We herein develop hybrid core-shell semiconducting nanoparticles (SPN-Ms) that can undergo O2 evolution in hypoxic solid tumor to promote photodynamic process. Such oxygenic nanoparticles are synthesized through a one-pot surface growth reaction and have a unique multilayer structure cored and coated with semiconducting polymer nanoparticles (SPNs) and manganese dioxide (MnO2) nanosheets, respectively. The SPN core serves as both NIR fluorescence imaging and photodynamic agent, while the MnO2 nanosheets act as a sacrificing component to convert H2O2 to O2 under hypoxic and acidic tumor microenvironment. As compared with the uncoated SPN (SPN-0), the oxygenic nanoparticles (SPN-M1) generate 2.68-fold more 1O2 at hypoxic and acidic conditions under NIR laser irradiation at 808 nm. Because of such an oxygen-evolution property, SPN-M1 can effectively eradicate cancer cells both in vitro and in vivo. Our study thus not only reports an in situ synthetic method to coat organic nanoparticles but also develops a tumor-microenvironment-sensitive theranostic nanoagent to overcome hypoxia for amplified therapy.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)586-594
Number of pages9
JournalNano Letters
Volume18
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jan 10 2018
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 American Chemical Society.

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • Bioengineering
  • General Chemistry
  • General Materials Science
  • Condensed Matter Physics
  • Mechanical Engineering

Keywords

  • cancer
  • photodynamic therapy
  • photosensitizer
  • Polymer nanoparticles

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