Nature Communications (Jan 2025)

Phthalocyanine aggregates as semiconductor-like photocatalysts for hypoxic-tumor photodynamic immunotherapy

  • Hao Liu,
  • Ziqing Li,
  • Xiaojun Zhang,
  • Yihui Xu,
  • Guoyan Tang,
  • Zhaoxin Wang,
  • Yuan-Yuan Zhao,
  • Mei-Rong Ke,
  • Bi-Yuan Zheng,
  • Shuping Huang,
  • Jian-Dong Huang,
  • Xingshu Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-55575-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 1
pp. 1 – 15

Abstract

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Abstract Photodynamic immunotherapy (PIT) has emerged as a promising approach for efficient eradication of primary tumors and inhibition of tumor metastasis. However, most of photosensitizers (PSs) for PIT exhibit notable oxygen dependence. Herein, a concept emphasizing on transition from molecular PSs into semiconductor-like photocatalysts is proposed, which converts the PSs from type II photoreaction to efficient type I photoreaction. Detailed mechanism studies reveal that the nanostructured phthalocyanine aggregate (NanoNMe) generates radical ion pairs through a photoinduced symmetry breaking charge separation process, achieving charge separation through a self-substrate approach and leading to exceptional photocatalytic charge transfer activity. Additionally, a reformed phthalocyanine aggregate (NanoNMO) is fabricated to improve the stability in physiological environments. NanoNMO showcases significant photocytotoxicities under both normoxic and hypoxic conditions and exhibits remarkable tumor targeting ability. Notably, the NanoNMO-based photodynamic therapy and PD-1 checkpoint inhibitor-based immunotherapy synergistically triggers the infiltration of cytotoxic T lymphocytes into the tumor sites of female mice, leading to the effective inhibition of breast tumor growth.