Publication | Open Access
Tailoring the Amphiphilic Structure of Zwitterionic AIE Photosensitizers to Boost Antitumor Immunity
63
Citations
19
References
2023
Year
Zwitterionic Aie PhotosensitizersNanotherapeuticsImmunologyAntitumor ImmunityImmunotherapyMembrane-targeting AiegenTumor BiologyAie PhotosensitizersNanomedicineMedicinal ChemistryTherapeutic NanomaterialsTumor ImmunityAmphiphilic StructureBioimagingChemodynamic TherapyAnti-cancer AgentPhotosensitizersRadiation OncologyHealth SciencesPhotochemistryPhotodynamic TherapyImmunoengineeringTumor TargetingPharmacologyCell BiologyTumor MicroenvironmentBiomolecular EngineeringDrug TargetingPolymer-drug ConjugateMedicineSmall MoleculesDrug Discovery
Although photodynamic therapy (PDT) for thorough cancer treatment is hindered by the limited generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) with short lifetime from photosensitizers, PDT-induced antitumor immune response remedies the defects. Previous studies show that inducing immunogenic cell deaths is an attractive approach to activate antitumor immunity, which confers a robust adjuvanticity to dying cancer cells. In this work, amphiphilic luminogens with aggregation-induced emission characteristics (AIEgens) are rationally designed and synthesized. By modulating the hydrophobic π-bridge and zwitterionic functional groups, these AIEgens exhibit tunable organelle specificity to lysosome, endoplasmic reticulum, and plasma membrane and enhance ROS generation ability. Notably, the membrane-targeting AIEgen namely TPS-2 induces cell death and membrane rupture via PDT to facilitate the release of antigens and activation of immune cells. Furthermore, the size-controlled TPS-2 nanoaggregates are found to serve as an adjuvant, promoting antigen accumulation and delivery to sufficiently boost the in vivo antitumor immunity by only one dose injection in a prophylactic tumor vaccination model. This work thus provides new insights into optimizing AIE photosensitizers via a hydrophobicity-hydrophilicity balance strategy for evoking an antitumor immunity and directly suppressing the distanced tumor. A single small-molecular system for PDT-stimulated antitumor immunity is envisioned.
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