1 research outputs found
Regulating Photosensitizer Metabolism with DNAzyme-Loaded Nanoparticles for Amplified Mitochondria-Targeting Photodynamic Immunotherapy
Mitochondria-specific
photosensitizer accumulation is highly recommended
for photodynamic therapy and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) oxidative damage-based
innate immunotherapy but remains challenging. 5-Aminolevulinic acid
(ALA), precursor of photosensitizer protoporphyrin IX (PpIX), can
induce the exclusive biosynthesis of PpIX in mitochondria. Nevertheless,
its photodynamic effect is limited by the intracellular biotransformation
of ALA in tumors. Here, we report a photosensitizer metabolism-regulating
strategy using ALA/DNAzyme-co-loaded nanoparticles (ALA&Dz@ZIF-PEG)
for mitochondria-targeting photodynamic immunotherapy. The zeolitic
imidazolate framework (ZIF-8) nanoparticles can be disassembled and
release large amounts of zinc ions (Zn2+) within tumor
cells. Notably, Zn2+ can relieve tumor hypoxia for promoting
the conversion of ALA to PpIX. Moreover, Zn2+ acts as a
cofactor of rationally designed DNAzyme for silencing excessive ferrochelatase
(FECH; which catalyzes PpIX into photoinactive Heme), cooperatively
promoting the exclusive accumulation of PpIX in mitochondria via the
“open source and reduced expenditure” manner. Subsequently,
the photodynamic effects derived from PpIX lead to the damage and
release of mtDNA and activate the innate immune response. In addition,
the released Zn2+ further enhances the mtDNA/cGAS-STING
pathway mediated innate immunity. The ALA&Dz@ZIF-PEG system induced
3 times more PpIX accumulation than ALA-loaded liposome, significantly
enhancing tumor regression in xenograft tumor models
