Abstract

Enzyme-activatable photoacoustic probes are powerful contrast agents to visualize diseases in which a specific enzyme is overexpressed. In this study, aluminum and silicon naphthalocyanines (AlNc and SiNc, respectively) conjugated with matrix metalloprotease-2 (MMP-2)-responsive PLGLAG peptide sequence and poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) as an axial ligand were designed and synthesized. AlNc-peptide-PEG conjugates AlNc-pep-PEG formed dimeric species interacting with each other through face-to-face H-aggregation in water, while SiNc-based conjugates SiNc-pep-PEG hardly interacted with each other because of the two bulky hydrophilic axial ligands. Both conjugates formed spherical nanometer-sized self-assemblies in water, generating photoacoustic waves under near-infrared photoirradiation. The treatment of MNc-peptide-PEG conjugates (M = Al, Si) with MMP-2 smoothly induced the cleavage of the PLGLAG sequence to release the hydrophilic PEG moiety, resulting in the aggregation of MNcs. By comparing the PA signal intensity changes at 680 and 760 nm, the photoacoustic signal intensity ratios were shown to be enhanced by 3-5 times after incubation with MMP-2. We demonstrated that MNc-peptide-PEG conjugates (M = Al, Si) could work as activatable photoacoustic probes in the in vitro experiment of MMP-2-overexpressed cell line HT-1080 as well as the in vivo photoacoustic imaging of HT-1080-bearing mice.

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