Organic–inorganic
hybrid materials have drawn increasing
attention as photothermal agents in tumor therapy due to the advantages
of green synthesis, high loading efficiency of hydrophobic drugs,
facile incorporation of theranostic iron, and excellent photothermal
efficiency without inert components or additives. Herein, we proposed
a strategy for biomimetic engineering-mediated enhancement of photothermal
performance in the tumor microenvironment (TME). This strategy is
based on the specific characteristics of organic–inorganic
hybrid materials and endows these materials with homologous targeting
ability and photothermal stability in the TME. The hybrid materials
perform the functions of cancer cells to target homolytic tumors (acting
as “artificial nanotargeted cells (ANTC)”). Inspired
by the pH-dependent disassembly behaviors of tannic acid (TA) and
ferric ion (FeIII) and subsequent attenuation of photothermal
performance, cancer cell membranes were self-deposited onto the surfaces
of protoporphyrin-encapsulated TA and FeIII nanoparticles
to achieve ANTC with TME-stable photothermal performance and tumor-specific
phototherapy. The resulting ANTC can be used as contrast agents for
concurrent photoacoustic imaging, magnetic resonance imaging, and
photothermal imaging to guide the treatment. Importantly, the high
loading efficiency of protoporphyrin enables the initiation of photodynamic
therapy to enhance photothermal therapeutic efficiency, providing
antitumor function with minimal side effects.
The
development of activatable photosensitizers to allow for the
reversible control of singlet oxygen (1O2) production
for photodynamic therapy (PDT) faces great challenges. Fortunately,
the flourishing field of supramolecular biotechnology provides more
effective strategies for activatable PDT systems. Here, we developed
a new reversible PDT on a switch that controls the 1O2 generation of self-assembled albumin nanotheranostics in
vitro and in vivo. A new molecular design principle of aggregation-induced
self-quenching photochromism and albumin on-photoswitching was demonstrated
using a new asymmetric, synthetic diarylethene moiety DIA. The photosensitizer porphyrin and DIA were incorporated
as building blocks in a glutaraldehyde-induced covalent albumin cross-linking
nanoplatform, HSA–DIA–porphyrin nanoparticles (NPs). More importantly, the excellent photoswitching property of DIA enables the resultant nanoplatform to act as a facile,
switchable strategy for photodynamic-immunotherapy.
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