Photochemical and biological dual-effects enhance the inhibition of photosensitizers for tumour growth

Abstract

Photosensitizers typically rely on a singular photochemical reaction to generate reactive oxygen species, which can then inhibit or eradicate lesions. However, photosensitizers often exhibit limited therapeutic efficiency due to their reliance on a single photochemical effect. Herein, we propose a new strategy that integrates the photochemical effect (type-I photochemical effect) with a biological effect (proton sponge effect). To test our strategy, we designed a series of photosensitizers (ZZ-sers) based on the naphthalimide molecule. ZZ-sers incorporate both a p-toluenesulfonyl moiety and weakly basic groups to activate the proton sponge effect while simultaneously strengthening the type-I photochemical effect, resulting in enhanced apoptosis and programmed cell death. Experiments confirmed near-complete eradication of the tumour burden after 14 days (Wlight/Wcontrol ≈ 0.18, W represents the tumour weight). These findings support the notion that the coupling of a type-I photochemical effect with a proton sponge effect can enhance the tumour inhibition by ZZ-sers, even if the basic molecular backbones of the photosensitizers exhibit nearly zero or minimal tumour inhibition ability. We anticipate that this strategy can be generalized to develop additional new photosensitizers with improved therapeutic efficacy while overcoming limitations associated with systems relying solely on single photochemical effects.

Graphical abstract: Photochemical and biological dual-effects enhance the inhibition of photosensitizers for tumour growth

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Edge Article
Submitted
05 Feb 2024
Accepted
25 Apr 2024
First published
25 Apr 2024
This article is Open Access

All publication charges for this article have been paid for by the Royal Society of Chemistry
Creative Commons BY license

Chem. Sci., 2024, Advance Article

Photochemical and biological dual-effects enhance the inhibition of photosensitizers for tumour growth

H. Niu, Y. Liu, Y. Wang, Y. Yang, G. Wang, T. D. James, J. L. Sessler and H. Zhang, Chem. Sci., 2024, Advance Article , DOI: 10.1039/D4SC00874J

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