Ligand engineering of Au44 nanoclusters for NIR-II luminescent and photoacoustic imaging-guided cancer photothermal therapy†
Abstract
Developing a high-performance noninvasive probe for precise cancer theranostics is very challenging but urgently required. Herein, a novel Au nanoclusters (NCs)-based probe was designed for cancer theranostics via ligand engineering by conjugating photoluminescent (PL) Au44 NCs in the second near-infrared window (NIR-II, 1000–1700 nm) with aromatic photoacoustic (PA)/photothermal molecules through click chemistry. This design bypasses the incompatibility dilemma between photoluminescence (PL) attributes and PA/photothermal properties because the rigidity of the PA/photothermal molecules can lead to aggregation-induced emission (AIE) of the Au(I)-ligand shell of the Au NCs by constraining their nonradiative relaxation. Benefiting from strong NIR-II PL with emissions at 1080 and 1240 nm, high photothermal conversion efficiency (65.12%), low cytotoxicity, appropriate renal clearance, and enhanced permeability and retention (EPR) effect, the as-designed Au NC-based theranostic probe achieves ultradeep NIR-II PL/PA imaging-guided cancer photothermal therapy (PTT). Remarkably, 16 days after photothermal treatment guided by NIR-II PL/PA imaging, mice were all healed without tumor recurrence, while the average life span of the mice in the control groups was only 17–21 days. This study is interesting because it provides a paradigm for designing a metal NC-based theranostics probe, and it may add fundamentally and methodologically to noninvasive imaging-guided disease therapy.
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