A NIR-II-emitting gold nanocluster-based drug delivery system for smartphone-triggered photodynamic theranostics with rapid body clearance
Kong, Yifei; Santos-Carballal, David; Martin, David; Sergeeva, Natalia N.; Wang, Weili; Liu, Guishi; Johnson, Benjamin; Bhayana, Brijesh; Lin, Zuantao; Wang, Yensheng; Le Guével, Xavier; de Leeuw, Nora H.; Zhou, Dejian; Wu, Mei X.
(2021) Materials Today, volume 51, pp. 96 - 107
(Article)
Abstract
Nanomedicine has grown structurally complex in order to perform multiple tasks at a time. However, their unsatisfied reliability, uniformity and reproducibility account for the high rates of attrition in translational research. So far, most studies have been one-sidedly focused on the treatment efficacy of inorganic nanoparticles as cancer therapeutics, but
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overlook their elimination from the body – a key factor in getting regulatory approval. Instead of developing a new drug nanocarrier with uncertain future in medical practice, we therefore choose to leverage the utility of promising and translatable gold nanoclusters (AuNCs) for designing a simple but robust “all-in-one” nanocluster drug delivery system, where the AuNCs not only strengthen the renal clearance of neutral red (NR) as a model drug, but also aid its passive tumor targeting via the enhanced permeability and retention (EPR) effect. More interestingly, NR can stimulate the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) to suppress tumor growth under ultralow-level radiation with a smartphone's torch (fluence rate: 8 mW/cm2). This finding is especially valuable to low- and middle-income countries lacking resources in healthcare settings. By means of first-principles simulations, we also study in-depth the energies, structural and electronic properties of the AuNCs emitting in the second near-infrared window (NIR-II, 1000–1700 nm). In brief, our model fulfills safety, effectiveness and cost-effectiveness requirements for translational development.
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Keywords: DFT calculation, Gold nanoclusters, NIR-II imaging, Photodynamic therapy, Renal clearance, Smartphone, Taverne, General Materials Science, Condensed Matter Physics, Mechanics of Materials, Mechanical Engineering
ISSN: 1369-7021
Publisher: Elsevier
Note: Funding Information: We acknowledge the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC grant number EP/K009567) for funding. Via our membership of the UK's HEC Materials Chemistry Consortium, which is funded by EPSRC (EPSRC grant numbers EP/L000202, EP/R029431, EP/T022213), this work used the ARCHER UK National Supercomputing Service ( http://www.archer.ac.uk ). This work was undertaken on ARC4, part of the High-Performance Computing facilities at the University of Leeds, United Kingdom. This work also used the Supercomputing Facilities at Cardiff University operated by the Advanced Research Computing @ Cardiff (ARCCA) Division on behalf of the Supercomputing Wales (SCW) project, which is part-funded by the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) via the Welsh Government. This work was also supported by (1) Department of Defense/Air Force Office of Scientific Research Military Photomedicine Program (FA9550-17-1-0277), American Cancer Society (132998-MBG-18-208-01) and Department discretional funds to M.X.W; (2) the UK Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC, grant no: BB/R007829/1) to D.Z. We also acknowledge the help of Dr Dehua Huang, Dr Yejun Zhang and Prof. Qiangbin Wang from Suzhou Institute of Nano-tech and Nano-bionics, Chinese Academy of Sciences with in vivo experiment. Publisher Copyright: © 2021 Elsevier Ltd
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