Abstract

Oxygen-dependent photodynamic therapy (PDT) is hindered by the limited availability of endogenous oxygen in solid tumors and low tumor accumulation of photosensitizers. Herein, we developed a biocompatible cancer-targeted therapeutic nanosystem based on cRGD conjugated bovine serum albumin (CBSA) co-loaded with a photosensitizer (chlorin e6, Ce6) and a therapeutic protein (cytochrome c, Cytc) for synergistic photodynamic and protein therapy. The nanosystem (Ce6/Cytc@CBSA) can target αVβ3 integrin overexpressed cancer cells to improve tumor accumulation due to incorporation of cRGD. In the intracellular environment, Ce6 is released to produce toxic singlet oxygen upon near-infrared irradiation. At the same time, the therapeutic protein, Cytc, can induce programmed cell death by activating the downstream caspase pathway. Most importantly, Cytc with the catalase-like activity accelerates O2 generation by decomposing excess H2O2 in cancer cells, thereby relieving the PDT-induced hypoxia to enhance therapeutic efficacy. Both in vitro and in vivo studies reveal the significantly improved antitumor effects of the combined photodynamic/protein therapy, indicating that Ce6/Cytc@CBSA shows great potential in synergetic cancer treatments.

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