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Confined semiconducting polymers with boosted NIR light-triggered HO production for hypoxia-tolerant persistent photodynamic therapy. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Hypoxia and the short lifespan of reactive oxygen species (ROS) limit the effectiveness of photodynamic therapy (PDT) in treating tumors, prompting the need for improved therapies.
  • Researchers developed a semiconducting polymer-based photosensitizer, PCPDTBT, which significantly enhances ROS generation when encapsulated in a mesoporous silica matrix, resulting in better PDT performance.
  • The addition of Fe ions increases drug loading capacity and enables continuous ROS production through a Fenton reaction after laser treatment, allowing for improved treatments in hypoxic tumor environments.

Article Abstract

Hypoxia featured in malignant tumors and the short lifespan of photo-induced reactive oxygen species (ROS) are two major issues that limit the efficiency of photodynamic therapy (PDT) in oncotherapy. Developing efficient type-I photosensitizers with long-term ˙OH generation ability provides a possible solution. Herein, a semiconducting polymer-based photosensitizer PCPDTBT was found to generate O, ˙OH, and HO through type-I/II PDT paths. After encapsulation within a mesoporous silica matrix, the NIR-II fluorescence and ROS generation are enhanced by 3-4 times compared with the traditional phase transfer method, which can be attributed to the excited-state lifetime being prolonged by one order of magnitude, resulting from restricted nonradiative decay channels, as confirmed by femtosecond spectroscopy. Notably, HO production reaches 15.8 μM min under a 730 nm laser (80 mW cm). Further adsorption of Fe ions on mesoporous silica not only improves the loading capacity of the chemotherapy drug doxorubicin but also triggers a Fenton reaction with photo-generated HO to produce ˙OH continuously after the termination of laser irradiation. Thus, semiconducting polymer-based nanocomposites enables NIR-II fluorescence imaging guided persistent PDT under hypoxic conditions. This work provides a promising paradigm to fabricate persistent photodynamic therapy platforms for hypoxia-tolerant phototheranostics.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11290442PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d4sc01609bDOI Listing

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