A glycosylated AIE-active Fe(iii) photosensitizer activated by the tumor microenvironment for synergistic type I photodynamic and chemodynamic therapy†
Abstract
Photodynamic therapy (PDT) and chemodynamic therapy (CDT) are both promising cancer treatments to inhibit tumor cells by generating highly cytotoxic reactive oxygen species (ROS). Herein, we report a novel tumor microenvironment (TME) stimulus-responsive water-soluble glycosylated photosensitizer (BT-TPE@Fe-Lac), which can serve as a high-efficiency antitumor agent by combining PDT and CDT, based on the coordination of Fe3+ with lactosyl bis(2-pyridylmethyl)amine and an AIE luminogen (benzothiazole-hydroxytetraphenylethene, BT-TPE). BT-TPE@Fe-Lac is stable under physiological conditions and selectively targets HepG2 cells via asialoglycoprotein receptor (ASGPR)-mediated endocytosis. It rapidly dissociates into AIE-active BT-TPE molecules and a lactosyl ferric(III) complex in the acidic lysosomes of cancer cells. Upon exposure to light, BT-TPE produces O2˙− radicals for type I PDT. The ferric(III) complex is reduced to an Fe(II) complex upon depletion of glutathione, which primes the breakdown of endogenous H2O2 within the tumor microenvironment, thus generating highly toxic ˙OH for enhanced CDT. Compared with the monotherapy of PDT or CDT, BT-TPE@Fe-Lac can significantly increase the intracellular ROS levels to induce more tumor cell death under low drug doses and hypoxia-dependent conditions. This strategy leverages the unique properties of the TME to optimize therapeutic outcomes, offering a promising approach for the TME-responsive nanoplatform in advanced cancer therapy.