posted on 2018-08-02, 00:00authored byJingchao Li, Xu Zhen, Yan Lyu, Yuyan Jiang, Jiaguo Huang, Kanyi Pu
Phototheranostic
nanoagents are promising for early diagnosis and
precision therapy of cancer. However, their imaging ability and therapeutic
efficacy are often limited due to the presence of delivery barriers
in the tumor microenvironment. Herein, we report the development of
organic multimodal phototheranostic nanoagents that can biomimetically
target cancer-associated fibroblasts in the tumor microenvironment
for enhanced multimodal imaging-guided cancer therapy. Such biomimetic
nanocamouflages comprise a near-infrared (NIR) absorbing semiconducting
polymer nanoparticle (SPN) coated with the cell membranes of activated
fibroblasts. The homologous targeting mechanism allows the activated
fibroblast cell membrane coated SPN (AF-SPN) to specifically target
cancer-associated fibroblasts, leading to enhanced tumor accumulation
relative to the uncoated and cancer cell membrane coated counterparts
after systemic administration in living mice. As such, AF-SPN not
only provides stronger NIR fluorescence and photoacoustic signals
to detect tumors but also generates enhanced cytotoxic heat and singlet
oxygen to exert combinational photothermal and photodynamic therapy,
ultimately leading to an antitumor efficacy higher than that of the
counterparts. This study introduces an organic phototheranostic system
that biomimetically targets the component in the tumor microenvironment
for enhanced multimodal cancer theranostics.