Red-Light-Responsive
Polypeptoid Nanoassemblies Containing
a Ruthenium(II) Polypyridyl Complex with Synergistically Enhanced
Drug Release and ROS Generation for Anticancer Phototherapy
posted on 2023-11-30, 19:40authored byYandong Ma, Zhihua Zhang, Fan Sun, Pierre Mesdom, Xin Ji, Pierre Burckel, Gilles Gasser, Min-Hui Li
Polymer micelles/vesicles made of a red-light-responsive
Ru(II)-containing
block copolymer (PolyRu) are elaborated as a model system for anticancer
phototherapy. PolyRu is composed of PEG and a hydrophobic polypeptoid
bearing thioether side chains, 40% of which are coordinated with [Ru(2,2′:6′,2″-terpyridine)(2,2′-biquinoline)](PF6)2 via the Ru–S bond, resulting in a 67
wt % Ru complex loading capacity. Red-light illumination induces the
photocleavage of the Ru–S bond and produces [Ru(2,2′:6′,2″-terpyridine)(2,2′-biquinoline)(H2O)](PF6)2. Meanwhile, ROS are generated
under the photosensitization of the Ru complex and oxidize hydrophobic
thioether to hydrophilic sulfoxide, causing the disruption of micelles/vesicles.
During the disruption, ROS generation and Ru complex release are synergistically
enhanced. PolyRu micelles/vesicles are taken up by cancer cells while
they exhibit very low cytotoxicity in the dark. In contrast, they
show much higher cytotoxicity under red-light irradiation. PolyRu
micelles/vesicles are promising nanoassembly prototypes that protect
metallodrugs in the dark but exhibit light-activated anticancer effects
with spatiotemporal control for photoactivated chemotherapy and photodynamic
therapy.