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- Polymersomes with Red/NearāInfrared Emission and Reactive Oxygen Species Generation
Polymersomes with Red/NearāInfrared Emission and Reactive Oxygen Species Generation
Authors
Zhihua Zhang, Hui Chen, Youchao Wang, Nian Zhang, Sylvain TrĆ©pout, Ben Zhong Tang, Gilles Gasser, MināHui Li
Abstract
Abstract
In photodynamic therapy (PDT), the uses of nanoparticles bearing photosensitizers (PSs) can overcome some of the drawbacks of using a PS alone (e.g., poor water solubility and low tumor selectivity). However, numerous nanoāformulations are developed by physical encapsulation of PSs through Van der Waals interactions, which have not only a limited load efficiency but also some in vivo biodistribution problems caused by leakage or burst release. Herein, polymersomes made from an amphiphilic block copolymer, in which a PS with aggregationāinduced emission (AIEāPS) is covalently attached to its hydrophobic poly(amino acid) block, are reported. These AIEāPS polymersomes dispersed in aqueous solution have a high AIEāPS load efficiency (up to 46% as a mass fraction), a hydrodynamic diameter of 86Ā nm that is suitable for in vivo applications, and an excellent colloidal stability for at least 1 month. They exhibit a red/nearāinfrared photoluminescence and ability to generate reactive oxygen species (ROS) under visible light. They are nonācytotoxic in the dark as tested on Hela cells up to concentration of 100 µ