Thermo-responsive palladium–ruthenium nanozyme synergistic photodynamic therapy for metastatic breast cancer management†
Abstract
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) have become an effective “weapon” for cancer therapy due to their strong oxidation and high anti-tumor activity. Photodynamic therapy (PDT) is one of the classical methods to induce reactive oxygen species. Therefore, an ultraminiature palladium ruthenium alloy (sPdRu) and Ru(II) were combined with thermally responsive phase change materials (PCMs). Polypyridyl-complex (RCE) co-encapsulation was performed to obtain thermally responsive nanoparticles (PdRu-RCE@PCMNPs) for multimodal synergistic anti-breast cancer therapy. On the one hand, the thermosensitive PCM protective layer can realize the slow release of sPdRu, and then catalyze the production of oxygen from tumor endogenous H2O2 to perform RCE-mediated PDT. At the same time, sPdRu further increased ROS levels through peroxidase (POD) activity. On the other hand, sPdRu has high photothermal conversion efficiency and can be effectively used for photothermal therapy and photodynamic therapy. Importantly, PdRu-RCE@PCM NPs not only can effectively inhibit primary tumor growth, but also can inhibit tumor metastasis. In addition, due to the effective accumulation of sPdRu and RCE, PdRu-RCE@PCM NPs also show excellent fluorescence and photothermal imaging capabilities of tumors, which can be used for tumor tracing and evaluation of treatment. Accordingly, PdRu-RCE@PCM NPs are useful in treating primary tumors and inhibiting tumor metastasis.