Litcius/Paper detail

Tailoring Multifunctional Small Molecular Photosensitizers to In Vivo Self‐Assemble with Albumin to Boost Tumor‐Preferential Accumulation, NIR Imaging, and Photodynamic/Photothermal/Immunotherapy

Shenglin Luo, Xi Luo, Xiaojiao Wang, Lian Li, Huiguo Liu, Banghui Mo, Hongbo Gan, Wei Sun, Liting Wang, Houjie Liang, Songtao Yu

2022Small29 citationsDOI

Abstract

Cancer immunotherapy has great potential in tumor eradication and metastasis suppression. However, systemic administration of immune adjuvants and inadequate specificity in cancer treatment, lead to restricted therapeutic benefits and potential immune-related side effects in clinical settings. In this report, the synthesis of various lengths of heptamethine cyanine small molecules to act as multifunctional photosensitizers (PS) for tumor-specific accumulation, near-infrared (NIR) fluorescent imaging, and photodynamic/photothermal/immunotherapy is optimized. In particular, it is demonstrated that C8, which contains eight carbons on two N-alkyl side chains, efficiently self-assembles with albumin to form nanosized dye-albumin complexes. This feature facilitates C8 in vivo self-assembly to remarkably improve its water-solubility, NIR fluorescent emission, long-term blood circulation, as well as tumor-specific accumulation. More importantly, C8 not only exhibits a superior phototherapeutic effect on primary tumors, but also elicits secretion of damage associated molecular patterns, cytokine secretion, dendritic cell maturation, and cytotoxic T lymphocytes activation, ultimately triggering a sufficient antitumor immune response to suppress growths of distant and metastatic tumors. Hence, this multifunctional small molecular PS is characterized with excellent tumor-preferential accumulation, imaging-guided laser irradiation, and phototherapy-induced in situ antitumor immune response, providing a prospective future of its use in tumor-targeting immunotherapy.

Topics & Concepts

Photothermal therapyIn vivoImmunotherapyPhotodynamic therapyImmune systemCancer researchCyanineImmunogenic cell deathMaterials scienceCancerBiophysicsChemistryMedicineImmunologyNanotechnologyFluorescenceBiologyInternal medicineQuantum mechanicsPhysicsBiotechnologyOrganic chemistryNanoplatforms for cancer theranosticsPhotodynamic Therapy Research StudiesAdvanced Nanomaterials in Catalysis