Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

The concept of using two-photon excitation in the NIR for the spatiotemporal control of biological processes holds great promise. However, its use for the delivery of nucleic acids has been very scarcely described and the reported procedures are not optimal as they often involve potentially toxic materials and irradiation conditions. This work prepares a simple system made of biocompatible porous silicon nanoparticles (pSiNP) for the safe siRNA photocontrolled delivery and gene silencing in cells upon two-photon excitation. PSiNP are linked to an azobenzene moiety, which possesses a lysine group (pSiNP@ICPES-azo@Lys) to efficiently complex siRNA. Non-linear excitation of the two-photon absorber system (pSiNP) followed by intermolecular energy transfer (FRET) to trans azobenzene moiety, result in the photoisomerization of the azobenzene from trans to cis and in the destabilization of the azobenzene-siRNA complex, thus inducing the delivery of the cargo siRNA to the cytoplasm of cells. Efficient silencing in MCF-7 expressing stable firefly luciferase with siRNAluc against luciferase is observed. Furthermore, siRNA against inhibitory apoptotic protein (IAP) leads to over 70% of MCF-7 cancer cell death. The developed technique using two-photon light allows a unique high spatiotemporally controlled and safe siRNA delivery in cells in few seconds of irradiation.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11468491PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/adhm.202301052DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

two-photon light
8
porous silicon
8
silicon nanoparticles
8
two-photon excitation
8
safe sirna
8
azobenzene moiety
8
sirna
6
two-photon
5
light trigger
4
trigger sirna
4

Similar Publications

Regulating the electronic structure by doping can promote photoluminescence emission of low-dimensional metal halides for developing white-light-emitting devices. Here, 0D metal halides RbBiCl have achieved a transition from nonluminescence to effective self-trapped excitons (STEs) emission after Sb ion doping at room temperature. The femtosecond transient absorption spectrum reveals the nonradiative recombination was suppressed, whose lifetimes change from 93.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Ultraviolet (UV) irradiation of DNA causes genotoxic photolesions, such as carcinogenic pyrimidine(6-4)pyrimidone photoproducts ((6-4)PPs). In many organisms, (6-4)PPs are repaired by (6-4) photolyases, which contain a flavin chromophore and use blue light energy to initiate the catalytic reaction. Although (6-4)PP repair has been shown to require the input of two successive photons, details of the mechanism remain elusive.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Light scattering in the skull limits optical access to the brain. Here we present SeeThrough, a skull-clearing technique that enables simple, high-resolution, and minimally-invasive brain imaging without skull removal. Through systematic screening of over 1600 chemicals, we rationally developed a refractive index-matching solution that combines water- and organic solvent-based components, achieving both high clearing efficiency and biocompatibility.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Light scattering in biological tissue presents a significant challenge for deep in vivo imaging. Our previous work demonstrated the ability to achieve optical transparency in live mice using intensely absorbing dye molecules, which created transparency in the red spectrum while blocking shorter-wavelength photons. In this paper, we extend this capability to achieve optical transparency across the entire visible spectrum by employing molecules with strong absorption in the ultraviolet spectrum and sharp absorption edges that rapidly decline upon entering the visible spectrum.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Organic photosensitizers: from molecular design to phototheranostics.

Chem Soc Rev

August 2025

State Key Laboratory of Flexible Electronics (LoFE) & Institute of Advanced Materials (IAM), School of Flexible Electronics (Future Technologies), Nanjing Tech University, Nanjing 211816, China.

Photodynamic therapy (PDT) has emerged as a highly promising approach for tumor treatment, owing to its remarkable spatiotemporal precision and non-invasive characteristics. Nevertheless, the clinical translation of conventional organic photosensitizers remains constrained by inherent limitations, including a low photosensitization effect, limited reactive oxygen species (ROS) production in a hypoxic tumor microenvironment (TME), restricted tissue penetration depth, and inefficient tumor-targeting. To address these challenges, this review examines molecular engineering strategies through rational structure design, focusing on five critical aspects: (i) to promote the intersystem crossing (ISC) process by introducing heavy atoms, designing photosensitizers with a twisted conformation structure or polymerization for amplified ROS generation; (ii) to conquer tumor hypoxia construction of type I photosensitizers, fractional photosensitizers and other radical-generating photosensitizers; (iii) to excite with near-infrared light constructing a D-A structure, fabricating -aggregates, or utilizing two-photon excitation to improve the penetration depth; (iv) to target tumor tissues through conjugating photosensitizers with tumor-specific ligands or gene-encoded fragments to achieve tumor-targeted therapy; and (v) to reduce the off-target effect designing TME-activatable photosensitizers.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF