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Photodynamic Nanophotosensitizers: Promising Materials for Tumor Theranostics

Rajendiran Keerthiga, Zizhen Zhao, De‐Sheng Pei, Ailing Fu

2020ACS Biomaterials Science & Engineering25 citationsDOI

Abstract

Photodynamic theranostics/therapy (PDT) is a potential strategy for selectively imaging malignant sites and treating cancer via a non-invasive therapeutic method. Photosensitizers, the crucial components of PDT, enable colocalization of photons and light, and photon/light therapy in the therapeutic window of 400–900 nm exhibits photocytotoxicity to tumor cells. Due to their high biostability and photocytotoxicity, nanophotosensitizers (NPSs) are of much interest for malignant tumor theranostics at present. NPS-activated photons transfer energy through the absorption of a photon and convert molecular oxygen to the singlet reactive oxygen species, which leads to apoptosis and necrosis. Moreover, NPSs modified by polymers, including PLGA, PEG-PLA, PDLLA, PVCL-g-PLA, and P(VCL-co-VIM)-g-PLA, exhibit excellent biocompatibility, and a tumor-targeting molecule linked on the nanoparticle surface can precisely deliver NPSs into the tumor region. The development of NPSs will accelerate the progress in tumor theranostics through the photon/light pathway.

Topics & Concepts

Photodynamic therapySinglet oxygenPhotosensitizerMaterials scienceBiocompatibilityNanoparticleNanotechnologyChemistryPhotochemistryOxygenOrganic chemistryMetallurgyNanoplatforms for cancer theranosticsPhotodynamic Therapy Research StudiesAdvanced Photocatalysis Techniques
Photodynamic Nanophotosensitizers: Promising Materials for Tumor Theranostics | Litcius