Abstract

Near-infrared photoimmunotherapy (NIR-PIT) is a recently described method for cancer treatment that utilizes an antibody-conjugated phthalocyanine photosensitizer and NIR light. In NIR-PIT, light of 690 nm wavelength is used to activate a photosensitizer, IR700, while longer-wavelength light penetrates deeper into tissues. Thus, more effective NIR-PIT would be achieved by using photosensitizers that are activated by longer-wavelength light. The absorption wavelength would be red-shifted by destabilizing the highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO) energy level by introducing electron donating groups at the α positions of a phthalocyanine ring. In this study, we developed a red-shifted photosensitizer for NIR-PIT, KA800, whose absorption wavelength was red-shifted by the introduction of ethoxy groups to IR700. As intended, the absorption maximum of KA800 was red-shifted compared to IR700 by 84 nm. Although phototoxicity of the antibody-KA800 (Ab-KA800) conjugate was observed in cultured cancer cells, no therapeutic effect was observed in mice. This is because the cytotoxicity of Ab-KA800 was mainly due to singlet oxygen, which can be quenched by abundant antioxidants in vivo. KA800 had low reactivity with respect to axial ligand cleavage required for inducing cell death via aggregate formation, a unique cytotoxic mechanism in NIR-PIT. The axial ligand cleavage proceeds via the anion radical formation of the photosensitizer, and KA800 was found to be less likely to receive an electron than IR700. This may be due to the destabilization of the HOMO energy level of KA800. Therefore, our findings suggest that stabilizing the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO) energy level would be better than destabilizing the HOMO energy level for developing a red-shifted photosensitizer for NIR-PIT.

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