Abstract

Photodynamic therapy (PDT) exhibits great potential for cancer therapy, but still suffers from nonspecific photosensitivity and poor penetration of photosensitizer. Herein, a smart perylene monoimide-based nanocluster capable of enzyme-triggered disassembly is reported as an activatable and deeply penetrable photosensitizer. A novel carboxylesterase (CE)-responsive tetrachloroperylene monoimide (P1) was synthesized and assembled with folate-decorated albumins into a nanocluster (FHP) with a diameter of circa 100 nm. Once P1 is hydrolyzed by the tumor-specific CE, FHP disassembles into ultrasmall nanoparticles (ca. 10 nm), facilitating the deep tumor penetration of FHP. Furthermore, such enzyme-triggered disassembly of FHP leads to enhanced fluorescence intensity (ca. 8-fold) and elevated singlet oxygen generation ability (ca. 4-fold), enabling in situ near-infrared fluorescence imaging and promoted PDT. FHP permits remarkable tumor inhibition in vivo with minimal side effects through imaging-guided, activatable, and deep PDT. This work confirms that this cascaded multifunctional control through enzyme-triggered molecular disassembly is an effective strategy for precise cancer theranostics.

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