Recent Advances in Hypoxia-Overcoming Strategy of Aggregation-Induced Emission Photosensitizers for Efficient Photodynamic Therapy

Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review

81 Scopus Citations
View graph of relations

Detail(s)

Original languageEnglish
Article number2101607
Journal / PublicationAdvanced Healthcare Materials
Volume10
Issue number24
Online published21 Oct 2021
Publication statusPublished - 22 Dec 2021

Abstract

Hypoxia is an inherent physiologic barrier in the microenvironment of solid tumor and has badly restricted the therapeutic effect of photodynamic therapy (PDT). Meanwhile, the photosensitizer (PS) agents used for PDT applications regularly encounter the tiresome aggregation-caused quenching effect that seriously decreases the production efficiency of cytotoxic reactive oxygen species. The aggregation-induced emission (AIE) PSs with antiquenching characteristics in the aggregate state are considered as a promising tool for achieving highly efficient PDT applications, and plenty of studies have widely demonstrated their advantages in various diseases. Herein, the recent progress of AIE PSs in the battle of antitumor hypoxia issue is summarized and the practical molecular principles of hypoxia-overcoming AIE PSs are highlighted. According to the hypoxia-overcoming mechanism, these representative cases are divided into low O2-dependent (type I PDT) and O2-dependent tactics (mainly including O2-enrichment type II PDT and combination therapy). Furthermore, the underlying challenges and prospects of AIE PSs in hypoxia-overcoming PDT are proposed and thus expect to promote the next development of AIE PSs.

Research Area(s)

  • aggregation-induced emissions, hypoxia, photodynamic therapy, photosensitizers, tumor therapy

Citation Format(s)