4.8 Article

An Injectable Hydrogel for Simultaneous Photothermal Therapy and Photodynamic Therapy with Ultrahigh Efficiency Based on Carbon Dots and Modified Cellulose Nanocrystals

Journal

ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS
Volume 31, Issue 45, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adfm.202106079

Keywords

carbon dots; cellulose nanocrystals; injectable hydrogels; simultaneous photothermal therapy; photodynamic therapy

Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2016YFA0202900, 2016YFC1402400]
  2. MOE Joint Foundation [6141A02022264]
  3. National Science Natural Foundation of China [51672173, 81770934, U1733130]
  4. Shanghai Science and Technology Committee [21ZR1435700, 18520744700, 18JC1410500]
  5. Translational Medicine National Key Science and Technology Infrastructure (Shanghai) Open Project [TMSK2020128]
  6. Shanghai Municipal Education Commission-Gaofeng Clinical Medicine Grant Support [20181810]
  7. Clinical research MDT project of the Ninth People's Hospital Affiliated to Shanghai Jiaotong University School of Medicine [201905]

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An injectable hydrogel for simultaneous photothermal therapy and photodynamic therapy was developed through a chemical reaction between NCDs and cellulose nanocrystals. The hydrogel showed high efficiency and safety, demonstrating significant tumor inhibition effects.
The convenience of injectable hydrogels that can provide high loading of diverse phototherapy agents and further long-time retention at the tumor site has attracted tremendous interest in simultaneous photothermal and photodynamic cancer therapies. However, to incorporate the phototherapy agents into hydrogels, complex modifications are generally unavoidable. Moreover, these phototherapy agents usually suffer from low efficiency and work at different irradiation wavelengths outside the near infrared windows. Hence, a method for the fabrication of an injectable hydrogel for simultaneous photothermal therapy and photodynamic therapy, through the Schiff-base reaction between amido modified carbon dots (NCDs) and aldehyde modified cellulose nanocrystals is proposed. The NCDs act as both phototherapy agents and crosslinkers to form hydrogels. Significantly, the NCDs demonstrate an extremely high photothermal conversion efficiency of 77.6% which is among the highest levels for photothermal agents and a high singlet quantum yield of 0.37 under a single 660 nm light-emitting diode irradiation. The hydrogels are examined through in vitro and in vivo animal experiments which show nontoxic and effectively tumor inhibition. Thus, the strategy of direct reaction of phototherapy agents and the matrix not only provides new strategies for injectable hydrogel fabrication but paves a new road for advanced tumor treatment.

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