Abstract

Conventional photodynamic therapy (PDT) of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) faces a dilemma: low-power is insufficient to kill pro-inflammatory cells while high-power exacerbates inflammation. Herein, mitochondrial targeting is introduced in PDT of RA to implement a "less-is-more" strategy, where higher apoptosis in pro-inflammatory cells are achieved with lower laser power. In arthritic rats, chlorine 6-loaded and mitochondria-targeting liposomes (Ce6@M-Lip) passively accumulated in inflamed joints, entered pro-inflammatory macrophages, and actively localized to mitochondria, leading to enhanced mitochondrial dysfunction under laser irradiation. By effectively disrupting mitochondria, pro-inflammatory macrophages are more susceptible to PDT, resulting in increased apoptosis initiation. Additionally, it identifies that high-power irradiation caused cell rupture and release of endogenous danger signals that recruited and activated additional macrophages. In contrast, under low-power irradiation, mitochondria-targeting Ce6@M-Lip not only prevented inflammation but also reduced pro-inflammatory macrophage infiltration and pro-inflammatory cytokine secretion. Overall, targeting mitochondria reconciled therapeutic efficacy and inflammation, thus enabling efficacious yet inflammation-sparing PDT for RA. This highlights the promise of mitochondrial targeting to resolve the dilemma between anti-inflammatory efficacy and inflammatory exacerbation in PDT by implementing a "less-is-more" strategy.

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