4.8 Article

Facile Supramolecular Approach to Nucleic-Acid-Driven Activatable Nanotheranostics That Overcome Drawbacks of Photodynamic Therapy

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages 681-688

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.7b07809

Keywords

nanotheranostics; supramolecular assembly; photodynamic therapy; activatable; nucleic-acid-responsive disassembly

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21473033, 21301031, 21172037]
  2. National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) - Korea government (MSIP) [2012R1A3A2048814]
  3. Korea Mouse Phenotyping Project of the National Research Foundation [NRF-2016M3A9D5A01952416]
  4. Brain Korea 21 PLUS Project for Medical Science, Yonsei University

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Supramolecular chemistry provides a bottom-up method to fabricate nanostructures for biomedical applications. Herein, we report a facile strategy to directly assemble a phthalocyanine photo-sensitizer (PcS) with an anticancer drug mitoxantrone (MA) to form uniform nanostructures (PcS MA), which not only display nanoscale optical properties but also have the capability of undergoing nucleic acid-responsive disassembly. These supramolecular assemblies possess activatable fluorescence emission and singlet oxygen generation associated with the formation of free PcS, mild photothermal heating, and a concomitant chemotherapeutic effect associated with the formation of free MA. In vivo evaluations indicate that PcS-MA nanostructures have a high level of accumulation in tumor tissues, are capable of being used for cancer imaging, and have significantly improved anticancer effect compared to that of PcS. This study demonstrates an attractive strategy for overcoming the limitations of photodynamic cancer therapy.

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