A facile composite nanoparticle promoted by photoelectron transfer and consumption for tumor combination therapy†
Abstract
Titanium dioxide nanoparticles are a promising agent for oxygen-independent Type I photodynamic therapy (PDT). However, the low separation efficiency of electron–hole pairs limits their application. It is reported that Cu2(OH)PO4 can enhance the electron–hole pair separation of semiconductors, and its OCT CuII crystal form can be reduced to CuI under certain conditions. However, whether photo-generated electrons can reduce CuII in Cu2(OH)PO4 is unknown. Therefore, based on a simple hydrothermal method, a Cu2(OH)PO4 layer is composited on the surface of NIR-induced photothermal blue titanium dioxide nanoparticles (BT NPs) to form BT@Cu2(OH)PO4 composite nanoparticles (BTCu NPs). Through detection of the ˙OH and CuI generation, it can be found that the Cu2(OH)PO4 layer can not only promote the separation of electron–hole pairs through electron transfer to enhance PDT, but also can generate CuI to realize a Fenton-like reaction with H2O2 to achieve CDT. Compared with the BT NPs, the electron–hole separation efficiency of BTCu NPs is improved by 35.3%, and the ˙OH generation capacity is increased by 56% under the condition of adding H2O2. In HepG2 cells, the ROS generation ability of BTCu NPs is increased by 60%, and the apoptosis rate and necrosis rate are increased by 46% and 53%, respectively. That is, by one NIR laser, the combination of photo-thermal/photo-dynamic/chemo-dynamic therapy (PTT/PDT/CDT) is realized. Besides, the BTCu NPs caused significant lysosomal membrane permeabilization (LMP) and mitochondrial membrane potential depolarization, indicating a lysosomal–mitochondrial death pathway.