| Literature DB >> 30589210 |
Aiqing Ma1,2, Huaqing Chen1, Yanhong Cui3, Zhenyu Luo1, Ruijing Liang1, Zhihao Wu1, Ze Chen1, Ting Yin1, Jun Ni3, Mingbin Zheng1,2, Lintao Cai1.
Abstract
Metal complexes are widely used as anticancer drugs, while the severe side effects of traditional chemotherapy require new therapeutic modalities. Sonodynamic therapy (SDT) provides a significantly noninvasive ultrasound (US) treatment approach by activating sonosensitizers and initiating reactive oxygen species (ROS) to damage malignant tissues. In this work, three metal 4-methylphenylporphyrin (TTP) complexes (MnTTP, ZnTTP, and TiOTTP) are synthesized and encapsulated with human serum albumin (HSA) to form novel nanosonosensitizers. These nanosonosensitizers generate abundant singlet oxygen (1 O2 ) under US irradiation, and importantly show excellent US-activatable abilities with deep-tissue depths up to 11 cm. Compared to ZnTTP-HSA and TiOTTP-HSA, MnTTP-HSA exhibits the strongest ROS-activatable behavior due to the lowest highest occupied molecular orbital-lowest unoccupied molecular orbital gap energy by density functional theory. It is also effective for deep-tissue photoacoustic/magnetic resonance dual-modal imaging to trace the accumulation of nanoparticles in tumors. Moreover, MnTTP-HSA intriguingly achieves high SDT efficiency for simultaneously suppressing the growth of bilateral tumors away from ultrasound source in mice. This work develops a deep-tissue imaging-guided SDT strategy through well-defined metalloporphyrin nanocomplexes and paves a new way for highly efficient noninvasive SDT treatments of malignant tumors.Entities:
Keywords: deep tissue penetration; imaging-guided theranostics; metalloporphyrin complexes; nanosonosensitizers; noninvasive sonodynamic therapy
Year: 2018 PMID: 30589210 DOI: 10.1002/smll.201804028
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Small ISSN: 1613-6810 Impact factor: 13.281