Publication | Closed Access
Twisted‐Planar Molecular Engineering with Sonication‐Induced J‐Aggregation To Design Near‐Infrared J‐Aggregates for Enhanced Phototherapy
31
Citations
56
References
2024
Year
Supramolecular AssemblyNanotherapeuticsEngineeringStable J-aggregatesBiomedical EngineeringChemistryNanomedicineTherapeutic NanomaterialsTwisted-planar Molecular StrategySonication‐induced J‐aggregationBioimagingHybrid MaterialsMolecular ImagingBiophysicsDesign Near‐infrared J‐aggregatesPhotochemistryPhotodynamic TherapyNanotechnologyTwisted‐planar Molecular EngineeringMolecular AggregateMolecular EngineeringPlanar π-BridgeSelf-assemblyMedicine
J-aggregates show great promise in phototherapy, but are limited to specific molecular skeletons and poor molecular self-assembly controllability. Herein, we report a twisted-planar molecular strategy with sonication-induced J-aggregation to develop donor-acceptor (D-A) type J-aggregates for phototherapy. With propeller aggregation-induced emission (AIE) moieties as the twisted subunits and thiophene as the planar π-bridge, the optimal twisted-planar π-interaction in MTSIC induces appropriate slip angle and J-aggregates formation, redshifting the absorption from 624 nm to 790 nm. In contrast, shorter π-planarity results in amorphous aggregates, and elongation promotes charge transfer (CT) coupled J-aggregates. Sonication was demonstrated to be effective in controlling self-assembly behaviors of MTSIC, which enables the transformation from amorphous aggregates to H-intermediates, and finally to stable J-aggregates. After encapsulation with lipid-PEG, the resultant J-dots show enhanced phototherapeutic effects over amorphous dots, including brightness, reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation, and photothermal conversion, delivering superior cancer phototherapy performance. This work not only advances D-A type J-aggregates design but also provides a promising strategy for supramolecular assembly development.
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