Platinum-carbon-integrated nanozymes for enhanced tumor photodynamic and photothermal therapy

Tumor hypoxia compromises the effects of photodynamic therapy that consumes oxygen in the therapeutic process. Herein, a platinum (Pt)-carbon-integrated nanozyme with favorable catalase-like activity and photosensitizing properties was successfully constructed by immobilizing an ultrasmall Pt nanozy...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nanoscale 2020-07, Vol.12 (25), p.13548-13557
Hauptverfasser: Yang, Yang, Zhu, Daoming, Liu, Ying, Jiang, Bing, Jiang, Wei, Yan, Xiyun, Fan, Kelong
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Tumor hypoxia compromises the effects of photodynamic therapy that consumes oxygen in the therapeutic process. Herein, a platinum (Pt)-carbon-integrated nanozyme with favorable catalase-like activity and photosensitizing properties was successfully constructed by immobilizing an ultrasmall Pt nanozyme into a MOF-derived carbon nanozyme through an in situ reduction strategy. The integration of a Pt nanozyme significantly improves the catalase activity of a carbon nanozyme that can effectively catalyze the decomposition of endogenous hydrogen peroxide to produce oxygen to improve the effects of photodynamic therapy. In addition, the integration of a Pt nanozyme also enhances the intrinsic photothermal performance of a carbon nanozyme. Combining the improved catalase-like activity with the enhanced photothermal properties together, the Pt-carbon nanozyme exhibits remarkable tumor inhibition ability in vivo . Thus, utilizing the enzymatic activity and photothermal/photosensitizing properties of nanozymes has great potential to overcome the limitations of traditional therapeutic strategies, and could inspire new directions for nanozyme-based biomedical applications. Tumor hypoxia compromises the effects of photodynamic therapy that consumes oxygen in the therapeutic process.
ISSN:2040-3364
2040-3372
DOI:10.1039/d0nr02800b