| Literature DB >> 31379108 |
Ya-Fang Xiao1,2, Fei-Fei An3, Jia-Xiong Chen1,2, Jia Yu1, Wen-Wen Tao1, Zhiqiang Yu4, Richard Ting5, Chun-Sing Lee2, Xiao-Hong Zhang1.
Abstract
The combination of diagnostic and therapeutic functions in a single theranostic nanoagent generally requires the integration of multi-ingredients. Herein, a cytotoxic near-infrared (NIR) dye (IR-797) and its nanoassembly are reported for multifunctional cancer theranostics. The hydrophobic IR-797 molecules are self-assembled into nanoparticles, which are further modified with an amphiphilic polymer (C18PMH-PEG5000) on the surface. The prepared PEG-IR-797 nanoparticles (PEG-IR-797 NPs) possess inherent cytotoxicity from the IR-797 dye and work as a chemotherapeutic drug which induces apoptosis of cancer cells. The IR-797 NPs are found to have an ultrahigh mass extinction coefficient (444.3 L g-1 cm-1 at 797 nm and 385.9 L g-1 cm-1 at 808 nm) beyond all reported organic nanomaterials (<40 L g-1 cm-1 ) for superior photothermal therapy (PTT). In addition, IR-797 shows some aggregation-induced-emission (AIE) properties. Combining the merits of good NIR absorption, high photothermal energy conversion efficiency, and AIE, makes the PEG-IR-797 NPs useful for multimodal NIR AIE fluorescence, photoacoustic, and thermal imaging-guided therapy. The research exhibits the possibility of using a single ingredient and entity to perform multimodal NIR fluorescence, photoacoustic, and thermal imaging-guided chemo-/photothermal combination therapy, which may trigger wide interest from the fields of nanomedicine and medicinal chemistry to explore multifunctional theranostic organic molecules.Entities:
Keywords: combination therapy; photoacoustic imaging; photothermal therapy; theranostics; ultrahigh mass extinction coefficient
Year: 2019 PMID: 31379108 DOI: 10.1002/smll.201903121
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Small ISSN: 1613-6810 Impact factor: 13.281