Polydiacetylene-based poly-ion complex enabling aggregation-induced emission and photodynamic therapy dual turn-on for on-demand pathogenic bacteria elimination
发表刊物:Sci. China: Chem
卷号:65
页面范围:1782–1790
关键字:poly-ion complex, ROS responsive, polydiacetylene, photodynamic therapy, aggregation-induced emission
DOI码:10.1007/s11426-022-1317-0
发表时间:2022-08-16
影响因子:10.138
摘要:Poly-ion complex (PIC) integrating non-antibiotic theranostics holds great promise in the combat against drug-resistant bacteria. Photosensitizers with aggregation-induced emission (AIE) characteristic are particularly intriguing theranostic agents, but incorporating them into antibacterial PIC to enable both fluorescence and reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation turn-on is deemed a great challenge. Here we report the development of a PIC that can dually boost the fluorescence and ROS generation in the presence of pathogen bacteria. The PIC is constructed based on an anionic polydiacetylene poly(deca-4,6-diynedioic acid) (PDDA), which completely degrades in the presence of ROS. A cationic polymer quaternized poly(2-(dimethylamino)ethyl methacrylate) (PQDMA) that can disrupt bacterial membrane is co-loaded together with a highly efficient AIE photosensitizer TPCI in the PIC. PIC is nonfluorescent initially in that PDDA can quench the AIE of TPCI in PIC. When pathogenic bacteria are present, they can disturb the assembly of PIC to release TPCI, whose fluorescence turns on sensitively to indicate the existence of bacteria. The on-demand irradiation can be subsequently applied to excite TPCI, which generates ROS to degrade PDDA and deform the PIC. As a result, TPCI and PQDMA are completely released to eliminate bacteria through a synergy of turned-on photodynamic therapy (PDT) and membrane disruption. The highly efficient detection and inhibition against both Gramnegative and Gram-positive bacteria have validated this polydiacetylene-based PIC system as an effective non-antibiotic antibacterial theranostic platform as well as a new strategy to enable “turn-on” fluorescence sensing and imaging of AIE fluorophor