PH-Triggered and Enhanced Simultaneous Photodynamic and Photothermal Therapy Guided by Photoacoustic and Photothermal Imaging

Qianyun Tang, Wanyue Xiao, Chuhan Huang, Weili Si, Jinjun Shao, Wei Huang, Peng Chen*, Qi Zhang, Xiaochen Dong

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

176 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Developing smart photosensitizers sensitively responding to tumor-specific signals for reduced side effects and enhanced anticancer efficacy is a major challenge for tumor phototherapy. Herein, a pH-sensitive photosensitizer has been synthesized through introducing a pH-sensitive receptor (dimethylaminophenyl unit) onto the aza-BODIPY core (abbreviated as NAB). Through enveloping hydrophobic NAB with amphiphilic DSPE-mPEG2000, NAB nanoparticles (NPs, diameter ∼ 30 nm) with strong near-infrared absorption (∼792 nm) are obtained. NAB NPs can be activated in weak acidic environment to give high rate of reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation and enhanced photothermal effect. NAB NPs can selectively accumulate in the lysosomes of tumor cells and subsequently activate under the acidic microenvironment of lysosome (pH 5.0) to produce ROS for photodynamic therapy, due to switch-off of the photoinduced electron transfer (PET) pathway. In vivo, pH-enhanced photoacoustic imaging (PAI) and photothermal imaging (PTI) confirm that NAB NPs can selectively aggregate in the tumor, and the tumor growth can be effectively inhibited under xenon lamp irradiation through synergistic phototherapy (photodynamic and photothermal therapy, PDT/PTT). Furthermore, based on PAI signal and terminal elimination half-life (T1/2) obtained by pharmacokinetic experiment, it is concluded that the NAB NPs can be rapidly metabolized. The pH-sensitive NAB NPs offer a new possibility toward PAI and PTI guided synergistic phototherapy.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)5216-5224
Number of pages9
JournalChemistry of Materials
Volume29
Issue number12
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 27 2017
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 American Chemical Society.

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • General Chemistry
  • General Chemical Engineering
  • Materials Chemistry

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