Acceptor engineering produces ultrafast nonradiative decay in NIR-II Aza-BODIPY nanoparticles for efficient osteosarcoma photothermal therapy via concurrent apoptosis and pyroptosis

  • Zhenxiong Shi
  • , Hua Bai
  • , Jiaxing Wu
  • , Xiaofei Miao
  • , Jia Gao
  • , Xianning Xu
  • , Yi Liu
  • , Jiamin Jiang
  • , Jiaqi Yang
  • , Jiaxin Zhang
  • , Tao Shao
  • , Bo Peng
  • , Huili Ma
  • , Dan Zhu
  • , Guojing Chen
  • , Wenbo Hu
  • , Lin Li
  • , Wei Huang

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

65 Scopus citations

Abstract

Small-molecule photothermal agents (PTAs) with intense second near-infrared (NIR-II, 1,000 to 1,700 nm) absorption and high photothermal conversion efficiencies (PCEs) are promising candidates for treating deep-seated tumors such as osteosarcoma. To date, the development of small-molecule NIR-II PTAs has largely relied on fabricating donor acceptor donor (D A D/D∼) structures and limited success has been achieved. Herein, through acceptor engineering, a donor acceptor acceptor (D A A∼)-structured NIR-II aza-boron-dipyrromethene (aza-BODIPY) PTA (SW8) was readily developed for the 1,064-nm laser-mediated phototheranostic treatment of osteosarcoma. Changing the donor groups to acceptor groups produced remarkable red-shifts of absorption maximums from first near-infrared (NIR-I) regions (808 nm) to NIR-II ones (1,064 nm) for aza-BODIPYs (SW1 to SW8). Furthermore, SW8 self-Assembled into nanoparticles (SW8@NPs) with intense NIR-II absorption and an ultrahigh PCE (75%, 1,064 nm). This ultrahigh PCE primarily originated from an additional nonradiative decay pathway, which showed a 100-fold enhanced decay rate compared to that shown by conventional pathways such as internal conversion and vibrational relaxation. Eventually, SW8@NPs performed highly efficient 1,064-nm laser-mediated NIR-II photothermal therapy of osteosarcoma via concurrent apoptosis and pyroptosis. This work not only illustrates a remote approach for treating deep-seated tumors with high spatiotemporal control but also provides a new strategy for building high-performance small-molecule NIR-II PTAs.

Original languageEnglish
Article number0169
JournalResearch
Volume6
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2023
Externally publishedYes

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