| Literature DB >> 29232105 |
Xingshu Li1,2, Sungsook Yu3, Dayoung Lee2, Gyoungmi Kim2, Buhyun Lee3, Yejin Cho3, Bi-Yuan Zheng1, Mei-Rong Ke1, Jian-Dong Huang1, Ki Taek Nam3, Xiaoyuan Chen4, Juyoung Yoon2.
Abstract
Supramolecular chemistry provides a "bottom-up" method to fabricate nanostructures for biomedical applications. Herein, we report a facile strategy to directly assemble a phthalocyanine photosensitizer (PcS) with an anticancer drug mitoxantrone (MA) to form uniform nanostructures (PcS-MA), which not only display nanoscale optical properties but also have the capability of undergoing nucleic-acid-responsive disassembly. These supramolecular assemblies possess activatable fluorescence emission and singlet oxygen generation associated with the formation of free PcS, mild photothermal heating, and a concomitant chemotherapeutic effect associated with the formation of free MA. In vivo evaluations indicate that PcS-MA nanostructures have a high level of accumulation in tumor tissues, are capable of being used for cancer imaging, and have significantly improved anticancer effect compared to that of PcS. This study demonstrates an attractive strategy for overcoming the limitations of photodynamic cancer therapy.Entities:
Keywords: activatable; nanotheranostics; nucleic-acid-responsive disassembly; photodynamic therapy; supramolecular assembly
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29232105 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.7b07809
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881