Catalase Nanocrystals Loaded with Methylene Blue as Oxygen Self‐Supplied, Imaging‐Guided Platform for Photodynamic Therapy of Hypoxic Tumors
Ren‐Bin Zhou, Tymish Y. Ohulchanskyy, Hao Xu, Roman Ziniuk, Junle Qu
Abstract
Abstract Photodynamic therapy (PDT) is a well‐known method for cancer therapy in the clinic. However, the inherent hypoxia microenvironment of solid tumors enormously restricts the PDT efficiency. Herein, catalase nanocrystals (CatCry) are introduced as in situ oxygen (O 2 )‐generating system to relieve tumor hypoxia and enhance PDT efficiency for solid tumors. After loading with photosensitizer methylene blue (MB), a PDT drug platform (CatCry‐MB) emerges, allowing for significant increasing PDT efficiency instigated by three factors. First, the high stability and recyclable catalytic activity of CatCry enable a long‐term endogenous H 2 O 2 decomposition for continuous O 2 supply for sustained relief of tumor hypoxia. Second, both the produced O 2 and loaded MB are confined within CatCry nanoporous structure, shortening the diffusion distance between O 2 and MB to maximize the production of singlet oxygen ( 1 O 2 ). Third, the MB molecules are uniformly dispersed within CatCry lattice, avoiding MB aggregation and causing more MB molecules be activated to produce more 1 O 2 . With the three complementary mechanisms, tumor hypoxia is eradicated and the resulted enhancement in PDT efficiency is demonstrated in vitro and in vivo. The proposed approach opens up a new venue for the development of other O 2 ‐dependent tumor treatments, such as chemotherapy, radiotherapy, and immunotherapy.