A Mesoporous Nanoenzyme Derived from Metal–Organic Frameworks with Endogenous Oxygen Generation to Alleviate Tumor Hypoxia for Significantly Enhanced Photodynamic Therapy

2019 
: Tumor hypoxia compromises the therapeutic efficiency of photodynamic therapy (PDT) as the local oxygen concentration plays an important role in the generation of cytotoxic singlet oxygen (1 O2 ). Herein, a versatile mesoporous nanoenzyme (NE) derived from metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) is presented for in situ generation of endogenous O2 to enhance the PDT efficacy under bioimaging guidance. The mesoporous NE is constructed by first coating a manganese-based MOFs with mesoporous silica, followed by a facile annealing process under the ambient atmosphere. After removing the mesoporous silica shell and post-modifying with polydopamine and poly(ethylene glycol) for improving the biocompatibility, the obtained mesoporous NE is loaded with chlorin e6 (Ce6), a commonly used photosensitizer in PDT, with a high loading capacity. Upon the O2 generation through the catalytic reaction between the catalytic amount NE and the endogenous H2 O2 , the hypoxic tumor microenvironment is relieved. Thus, Ce6-loaded NE serves as a H2 O2 -activated oxygen supplier to increase the local O2 concentration for significantly enhanced antitumor PDT efficacy in vitro and in vivo. In addition, the NE also shows T2 -weighted magnetic resonance imaging ability for its in vivo tracking. This work presents an interesting biomedical use of MOF-derived mesoporous NE as a multifunctional theranostic agent in cancer therapy.
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