Abstract
Nowadays,
aggregation-induced emission luminogens (AIEgens) with reactive oxygen species
(ROS) generating ability have been used as photosensitizers for imaging guided
photodynamic therapy (PDT). To achieve enhanced antitumor outcomes, combining
AIEgens-based PDT with chemotherapy is an efficient strategy. However, the
therapeutic efficiency is hampered by the limited cellular uptake efficiency
and the appropriate light irradiation occasion. In this paper, a self-guiding
polymeric micelle (TB@PMPT) composed of two AIE photosensitizers and a
reduction-sensitive paclitaxel prodrug (PTX-SS-N3) was established
for enhanced chemo-photodynamic therapy by a dual-stage light irradiation
strategy. When the micelles were accumulated in tumor tissues, the first light
irradiation (L1, 6 min) was utilized to facilitate cellular uptake
by “photochemical internalization” (PCI). Then the intracellular glutathione
(GSH) would induce the PTX release, micelles disassembly and the aggregation
state change of AIEgens. The fluorescence signal change of two AIEgens-based
ratiometric fluorescent probe could not only precisely guide the second light
irradiation (L2, 18 min) for sufficient ROS production, but also
monitor the non-fluorescent drug PTX release in turn. Both in vivo and in
vitro studies demonstrated that the dual-stage light irradiation strategy
employed for TB@PMPT micelles exhibited superior therapeutic effect than only
24-min continuous light irradiation.