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Recent Advances in Activatable Organic Photosensitizers for Specific Photodynamic Therapy
Author(s) -
Liu Ming,
Li Changhua
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
chempluschem
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.801
H-Index - 61
ISSN - 2192-6506
DOI - 10.1002/cplu.202000203
Subject(s) - photodynamic therapy , photosensitizer , reactive oxygen species , chemistry , cancer research , singlet oxygen , nanotechnology , medicine , materials science , photochemistry , oxygen , biochemistry , organic chemistry
Photodynamic therapy is an alternative modality for the therapy of diseases such as cancer in a minimally invasive manner. The essential photosensitizer, which acts as a catalyst when absorbing light, converts oxygen into cytotoxic reactive oxygen species that ablate malignant cells through apoptosis and/or necrosis, destroy tumor microvasculature, and stimulate immunity. An activatable photosensitizer whose photoactivity could be turned on by a specific disease biomarker is capable of distinguishing healthy cells from diseased cells, thereby reducing off‐target photodamage. In this Minireview, we highlight progress in activatable organic photosensitizers over the past five years, including: (i) biorthogonal activatable BODIPYs; (ii) activatable Se‐rhodamine with single‐cell resolution; (iii) silicon phthalocyanine targeting oxygen tension; (iv) general D‐ π ‐A scaffolds; and (v) AIEgens. The potential challenges and opportunities for developing new types of activatable organic photosensitizers to overcome the hypoxia dilemmas of photodynamic therapy are discussed.

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