4.8 Article

Photoallosteric Polymersomes toward On-Demand Drug Delivery and Multimodal Cancer Immunotherapy

Journal

ADVANCED MATERIALS
Volume 35, Issue 24, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adma.202210986

Keywords

cancer immunotherapy; conformation; drug delivery; photoallosteric polymersome; polypeptide

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Researchers have constructed a light-controlled polymer that can undergo a conformational transition upon exposure to near-infrared light. This polymer improves cell penetration and lysosome escape, and stimulates the release of therapeutic substances in tumor cells. This light-controlled polymer shows great potential in cancer treatment.
Allosteric transitions can modulate the self-assembly and biological function of proteins. It remains, however, tremendously challenging to design synthetic allosteric polymeric assemblies with spatiotemporally switchable hierarchical structures and functionalities. Here, a photoallosteric polymersome is constructed that undergoes a rapid conformational transition from beta-sheet to alpha-helix upon exposure to near-infrared light irradiation. In addition to improving nanoparticle cell penetration and lysosome escape, photoinduced allosteric behavior reconstructs the vesicular membrane structure, which stimulates the release of hydrophilic cytolytic peptide melittin and hydrophobic kinase inhibitor sorafenib. Combining on-demand delivery of multiple therapeutics with phototherapy results in apoptosis and immunogenic death of tumor cells, remold the immune microenvironment and achieve an excellent synergistic anticancer efficacy in vivo without tumor recurrence and metastasis. Such a light-modulated allosteric transition in non-photosensitive polymers provides new insight into the development of smart nanomaterials for biosensing and drug delivery applications.

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