Kwon Nahyun, Weng Hanyi, Rajora Maneesha A, Zheng Gang
Princess Margaret Cancer Centre, University Health Network, 101 College Street, PMCRT 5-354, Toronto, ON, M5G1L7, Canada.
Department of Medical Biophysics, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl. 2025 Apr 7;64(15):e202423348. doi: 10.1002/anie.202423348. Epub 2025 Feb 21.
Photodynamic therapy (PDT) is a promising treatment that uses light to excite photosensitizers in target tissue, producing reactive oxygen species and localized cell death. It is recognized as a minimally invasive, clinically approved cancer therapy with additional preclinical applications in arthritis, atherosclerosis, and infection control. A hallmark of ideal PDT is delivering disease-specific cytotoxicity while sparing healthy tissue. However, conventional photosensitizers often suffer from non-specific photoactivation, causing off-target toxicity. Activatable photosensitizers (aPS) have emerged as more precise alternatives, offering controlled activation. Unlike traditional photosensitizers, they remain inert and photoinactive during circulation and off-target accumulation, minimizing collateral damage. These photosensitizers are designed to "turn on" in response to disease-specific biostimuli, enhancing therapeutic selectivity and reducing off-target effects. This review explores the principles of aPS, including quenching mechanisms stemming from activatable fluorescent probes and applied to activatable photosensitizers (RET, PeT, ICT, ACQ, AIE), as well as pathological biostimuli (pH, enzymes, redox conditions, cellular internalization), and bioresponsive constructs enabling quenching and activation. We also provide a critical assessment of unresolved challenges in aPS development, including limitations in targeting precision, selectivity under real-world conditions, and potential solutions to persistent issues (dual-lock, targeting moieties, biorthogonal chemistry and artificial receptors). Additionally, it provides an in-depth discussion of essential research design considerations needed to develop translationally relevant aPS with improved therapeutic outcomes and specificity.
光动力疗法(PDT)是一种很有前景的治疗方法,它利用光来激发靶组织中的光敏剂,产生活性氧并导致局部细胞死亡。它被认为是一种微创的、临床批准的癌症治疗方法,在关节炎、动脉粥样硬化和感染控制等方面还有临床前应用。理想的光动力疗法的一个标志是在不损伤健康组织的情况下实现疾病特异性细胞毒性。然而,传统的光敏剂常常存在非特异性光激活问题,导致脱靶毒性。可激活光敏剂(aPS)已成为更精确的替代方案,可实现可控激活。与传统光敏剂不同,它们在循环和脱靶积累过程中保持惰性和光不活性,将附带损伤降至最低。这些光敏剂被设计为响应疾病特异性生物刺激而“开启”,从而提高治疗选择性并减少脱靶效应。本文综述探讨了可激活光敏剂的原理,包括源于可激活荧光探针并应用于可激活光敏剂的猝灭机制(RET、PeT、ICT、ACQ、AIE),以及病理生物刺激(pH值、酶、氧化还原条件、细胞内化),和能够实现猝灭和激活的生物响应构建体。我们还对可激活光敏剂开发中尚未解决的挑战进行了批判性评估,包括靶向精度的局限性、现实条件下的选择性,以及针对持续存在问题的潜在解决方案(双锁、靶向部分、生物正交化学和人工受体)。此外,本文还深入讨论了开发具有改善治疗效果和特异性的、与转化相关的可激活光敏剂所需的重要研究设计考虑因素。