4.7 Article

Miniature NIR-II Nanoprobes for Active-Targeted Phototheranostics of Brain Tumors

Journal

ADVANCED HEALTHCARE MATERIALS
Volume 11, Issue 23, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/adhm.202202379

Keywords

brain tumors; indocyanine green; NIR-II fluorescence; photothermal therapy; theranostics

Funding

  1. Natural Science Foundation of China [81971638, 81827807]
  2. CAS Key Laboratory of Health Informatics [2011DP173015]
  3. Science and Technology Key Project of Shenzhen [JCYJ20190812163614809, JCYJ20200109114612308, JCYJ20210324120011030]
  4. Guangdong Basic and Applied Basic Research Fund [2020A1515110011, 2022A1515010384]
  5. Key Laboratory for Magnetic Resonance and Multimodality Imaging of Guangdong Province [2020B1212060051]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

A miniature nanoprobe named HSA-ICG-iRGD is developed for active-targeted NIR-II phototheranostics of brain tumors. The nanoprobe is designed based on hydrophobic interactions and hydrogen bonds between albumin and indocyanine green derivatives, showing compact size and tumor-targeting ability. It demonstrates great potential for active-targeted NIR-II fluorescence imaging and phototherapy of brain tumors.
Nanoprobes (NPs) in the second near-infrared biowindow (NIR-II, 1000-1700 nm) are developed and widely used in cancer phototheranostics. However, most NIR-II NPs exhibit low phototheranostic efficiency due to their tedious synthetic routes, large particle sizes (>20 nm), and lack of active targeting properties. Here, miniature NIR-II NPs, named HSA-ICG-iRGD, for active-targeted NIR-II phototheranostics of brain tumors are reported. The HSA-ICG-iRGD probes are designed based on hydrophobic interactions as well as hydrogen bonds between albumin and indocyanine green derivatives (ICG-iRGD) via molecular docking. The as-prepared NPs have a compact size of 10 nm and show tumor-targeting ability by specifically binding to alpha(v)beta(3) integrin receptors which are highly expressed on the surface of brain tumor cells via iRGD peptides. The HSA-ICG-iRGD NPs are then applied to perform active-targeted NIR-II fluorescence imaging, resulting in a signal-to-background ratio of 6.85 in orthotopic glioma mouse models. Under the selected laser irradiation of 808 nm, the photothermal effect of HSA-ICG-iRGD extends the survival of the tumor-bearing mice to 55 days, significantly longer than that of the control group (30 days). These results highlight the potential of miniature NPs for active-targeted NIR-II fluorescence imaging and phototherapy of brain tumors.

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