Cytosolic
NQO1 Enzyme-Activated Near-Infrared Fluorescence
Imaging and Photodynamic Therapy with Polymeric Vesicles
Posted on 2020-01-21 - 13:34
The
utilization of enzymes as a triggering module could endow responsive
polymeric nanostructures with selectivity in a site-specific manner.
On the basis of the fact that endogenous NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase
isozyme 1 (NQO1) is overexpressed in many types of tumors, we report
on the fabrication of photosensitizer-conjugated polymeric vesicles,
exhibiting synergistic NQO1-triggered turn-on of both near-infrared
(NIR) fluorescence emission and a photodynamic therapy (PDT) module.
For vesicles self-assembled from amphiphilic block copolymers containing
quinone trimethyl lock-capped self-immolative side linkages and quinone-bridged
photosensitizers (coumarin and Nile blue) in the hydrophobic block,
both fluorescence emission and PDT potency are initially in the “off”
state due to “double quenching” effects, that is, dye-aggregation-caused
quenching and quinone-rendered PET (photoinduced electron transfer)
quenching. After internalization into NQO1-positive vesicles, the
cytosolic NQO1 enzyme triggers self-immolative cleavage of quinone
linkages and fluorogenic release of conjugated photosensitizers, leading
to NIR fluorescence emission turn-on and activated PDT. This process
is accompanied by the transformation of vesicles into cross-linked
micelles with hydrophilic cores and smaller sizes and triggered dual
drug release, which could be directly monitored by enhanced magnetic
resonance (MR) imaging for vesicles conjugated with a DOTA(Gd) complex
in the hydrophobic bilayer. We further demonstrate that the above
strategy could be successfully applied for activated NIR fluorescence
imaging and tissue-specific PDT under both cellular and in
vivo conditions.