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Self‐Amplifying Iridium(III) Photosensitizer for Ferroptosis‐Mediated Immunotherapy Against Transferrin Receptor‐Overexpressing Cancer

Yu‐Yi Ling, Wen‐Jin Wang, Hao Liang, Xiaowen Wu, Jing‐Hao Liang, Hang Zhang, Zong‐Wan Mao, Cai‐Ping Tan

2022Small60 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract Photoimmunotherapy is attractive for cancer treatment due to its spatial controllability and sustained responses. This work presents a ferrocene‐containing Ir(III) photosensitizer ( IrFc1 ) that can bind with transferrin and be transported into triple‐negative breast cancer (TNBC) cells via a transferrin receptor‐mediated pathway. When the ferrocene in IrFc1 is oxidized by reactive oxygen species, its capability to photosensitize both type I (electron transfer) and type II (energy transfer) pathways is activated through a self‐amplifying process. Upon irradiation, IrFc1 induces the generation of lipid oxidation to cause ferroptosis in TNBC cells, which promotes immunogenic cell death (ICD) under both normoxia and hypoxia. In vivo, IrFc1 treatment elicits a CD8 + T‐cell response, which activates ICD in TNBC resulting in enhanced anticancer immunity. In summary, this work reports a small molecule‐based photosensitizer with enhanced cancer immunotherapeutic properties by eliciting ferroptosis through a self‐amplifying process.

Topics & Concepts

PhotosensitizerPhotodynamic therapyCancer researchTransferrin receptorChemistryCancer cellTriple-negative breast cancerTumor hypoxiaReactive oxygen speciesIridiumReceptorCancerBiologyBiochemistryMedicineBreast cancerInternal medicinePhotochemistryOrganic chemistryCatalysisGeneticsRadiation therapyNanoplatforms for cancer theranosticsAdvanced biosensing and bioanalysis techniquesFerroptosis and cancer prognosis
Self‐Amplifying Iridium(III) Photosensitizer for Ferroptosis‐Mediated Immunotherapy Against Transferrin Receptor‐Overexpressing Cancer | Litcius