Abstract

Photodynamic therapy (PDT) uses a combination of photosensitizers (PSs), light sources, and reactive oxygen species (ROS) to damage only the desired target and keep normal tissues from being hurt. The dark cytotoxicity (chemotoxicity) of PSs, leading to whole-body damage in the absence of irradiation, is a major limiting factor in PDT. How to simultaneously increase ROS generation and decrease dark cytotoxicity is an essential challenge that must be resolved in PS research. In this study, a series of homoligand polypyridyl ruthenium complexes (HPRCs) containing three singlet oxygen (1O2)-generating ligands (L) in a single molecule ([Ru(L)3]2+) have been constructed. Compared to the heteroligand complexes [Ru(bpy)2(L)]2+ where bpy is 2,2'-bipyridine, the 1O2 quantum yield under infrared two-photon irradiation and the DNA photocleavage effect of the HPRCs are significantly enhanced with two more ligands L. The intraligand triplet excited states transition played an important role in the activation of oxygen. The HPRCs target the mitochondria but not the nuclei, generating 1O2 intracellularly under irradiation of visible or infrared light. Ru1 exhibits high phototoxicity and low dark cytotoxicity toward human malignant melanoma cells in vitro. Moreover, HPRCs have minimal cytotoxicity to human normal liver cells, suggesting their potential as antitumor PDT reagents with more security. This study may provide inspiration for the structural design of potent PS for PDT.

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