A nitroreductase-responsive nanoprobe with homogeneous composition and high loading for preoperative non-invasive tumor imaging and intraoperative guidance

Jingqi Xin, Shupeng Han, Meichen Zheng, Chenfeng Xu, Zhongxi Huang, Bin Wang, Changmin Yu, Feifei An, Yu Ren

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

6 Scopus citations

Abstract

Tumor microenvironment (TME)-activatable probes have been proven to effectively increase signal-to-background ratios (SBRs) and improve the success rate of complete tumor resection. However, many fluorescence probes have to be loaded into a nanocarrier for tumor targeted delivery, which consequently encounters poor drug loading, heterogeneous composition and non-encapsulated drug aggregates occurred during nanoformulation fabrications. Herein, a nitroreductase (NTR)-activated “OFF-ON” near-infrared fluorescence nanoprobe, named NanoBodipy, was synthesized by the spontaneous self-assembling of NTR-responsive dye-polyethylene glycol (PEG) amphiphilic polymer in water. The NTR-responsive dye acted as the hydrophobic segment in the amphiphilic polymer, yielding a homogeneous composition and a high loading of 12.2 wt% (according to calculation) in the synthesized NanoBodipy. The synthesized NanoBodipy can efficiently accumulate in tumors via the enhanced permeability and retention (EPR) effect, enabling non-invasive tumor-targeted fluorescence imaging and guiding complete tumor resection. Once the synthesized NanoBodipy entered the tumor cells, they dissociated and were activated by overexpressed NTR. With the real-time fluorescence guide of NanoBodipy, complete tumor resection surgery was performed successfully.

Original languageEnglish
Article number109165
JournalChinese Chemical Letters
Volume35
Issue number7
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 2024

Keywords

  • Intraoperative guidance
  • Nanoprobe
  • Nitroreductase
  • Self-assembly
  • Tumor diagnosis

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