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学者姓名:杨黄浩

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< Page ,Total 48 >
Polyvinylpyrrolidone-enhanced perovskite films for efficient direct X-ray detection SCIE
期刊论文 | 2025 , 13 (18) , 9365-9373 | JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY C
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Abstract :

In recent years, metal halide perovskites have garnered significant attention in the field of X-ray detection due to their outstanding photoelectric properties, high X-ray attenuation coefficients, and the advantage of being able to be fabricated by low-cost solution processing methods. However, a major challenge in developing perovskite X-ray detectors lies in the low quality of films produced through solution processing. In this work, we introduce an efficient method that employs a straightforward blade-coating technique to successfully prepare MAPbI3 perovskite films with a thickness of tens of microns under ambient conditions. To further improve the quality of the MAPbI3 films, we incorporate the polymer polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) into the perovskite precursor solution. The addition of PVP promotes crystal growth, resulting in an enlarged grain size and a more uniform arrangement within the perovskite film. This enhancement leads to a reduction in defect density and subsequent improvement in the charge collection efficiency. Consequently, the detector manufactured using the PVP-optimized film exhibits an enhanced X-ray sensitivity of 2.6 x 103 mu C Gyair-1 cm-2 and achieves a low detection limit of 11 nGyair s-1 under 10 keV X-ray energy, surpassing those achieved with the original perovskite film which measured 0.60 x 103 mu C Gyair-1 cm-2 and 139 nGyair s-1 under the same conditions. This work unlocks new prospects for the straightforward and cost-effective manufacture of high-performance X-ray detectors.

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GB/T 7714 Hua, Yanlong , Chen, Jiahui , Guo, Cuiling et al. Polyvinylpyrrolidone-enhanced perovskite films for efficient direct X-ray detection [J]. | JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY C , 2025 , 13 (18) : 9365-9373 .
MLA Hua, Yanlong et al. "Polyvinylpyrrolidone-enhanced perovskite films for efficient direct X-ray detection" . | JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY C 13 . 18 (2025) : 9365-9373 .
APA Hua, Yanlong , Chen, Jiahui , Guo, Cuiling , Chen, Shan-Ci , He, Yu , Yang, Huanghao . Polyvinylpyrrolidone-enhanced perovskite films for efficient direct X-ray detection . | JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY C , 2025 , 13 (18) , 9365-9373 .
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Pickering emulsion-based biomimetic microreactors SCIE
期刊论文 | 2025 , 9 (8) , 1290-1311 | MATERIALS CHEMISTRY FRONTIERS
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Pickering emulsions are dispersions of two immiscible liquids stabilized by surface-active colloidal nano-/microparticles. Their compartmentalized structures closely resemble the characteristics of cellular and subcellular systems, enabling the development of biomimetic microreactors that enhance catalytic processes. By enlarging interfacial areas while effectively partitioning reactants into their preferred phases, Pickering emulsion-based microreactors improve kinetic parameters and prevent unwanted interactions. The adaptability of Pickering emulsions is further augmented through modifications to the properties and composition of the particle emulsifiers, rendering them multifunctional and facilitating efficient reactions between immiscible phases, such as oil and water, especially when the emulsifiers themselves act as catalysts. This review summarizes recent advances in Pickering emulsion-based biomimetic microreactors, focusing on the versatile choice of various particles, design principles, and their applications in facilitating biphasic catalysis in a biomimetic way. We also discuss the challenges and future perspectives for further refining these microreactors for enhanced biphasic catalytic processes.

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GB/T 7714 Xu, Xiao , Zhou, Min , Wu, Ting et al. Pickering emulsion-based biomimetic microreactors [J]. | MATERIALS CHEMISTRY FRONTIERS , 2025 , 9 (8) : 1290-1311 .
MLA Xu, Xiao et al. "Pickering emulsion-based biomimetic microreactors" . | MATERIALS CHEMISTRY FRONTIERS 9 . 8 (2025) : 1290-1311 .
APA Xu, Xiao , Zhou, Min , Wu, Ting , Chen, Zhaowei , Yang, Huanghao . Pickering emulsion-based biomimetic microreactors . | MATERIALS CHEMISTRY FRONTIERS , 2025 , 9 (8) , 1290-1311 .
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Beyond species and spatial boundaries: Enabling long-distance gene silencing in plants via guanidinium-siRNA nanoparticles SCIE
期刊论文 | 2025 , 23 (4) , 1165-1177 | PLANT BIOTECHNOLOGY JOURNAL
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RNA interference (RNAi) has been widely used in agriculture. However, it is well accepted that common methods of plant RNAi are species-dependent and lack systematic efficiency. This study designed a thiolated siRNA nanoparticle, guanidinium (Gu+)-containing disulfide assembled siRNA (Gu+-siRNA), demonstrating remarkable species independence and efficient systemic gene silencing across different plant species. Our results indicate that this approach effectively utilizes the plant vascular system to deliver siRNA, enabling long-distance gene silencing across both monocot and dicot plants, such as rice and Arabidopsis. By applying this method, we successfully targeted and silenced key genes like STM, WER, MYB23, GD1, EIL1, and EIL2, which regulate plant development and enhance salt tolerance. This delivery system significantly expands the application of RNAi technology across different plants, serving as a valuable tool for advancing agricultural biotechnology, enhancing crop resistance, and improving agricultural productivity, while aligning with global goals for sustainable food production and crop improvement.

Keyword :

long-distance movement long-distance movement nanoparticle nanoparticle RNA interference RNA interference systematically deliver systematically deliver thiolated thiolated

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GB/T 7714 Lin, Shujin , Zhang, Qian , Bai, Shiyan et al. Beyond species and spatial boundaries: Enabling long-distance gene silencing in plants via guanidinium-siRNA nanoparticles [J]. | PLANT BIOTECHNOLOGY JOURNAL , 2025 , 23 (4) : 1165-1177 .
MLA Lin, Shujin et al. "Beyond species and spatial boundaries: Enabling long-distance gene silencing in plants via guanidinium-siRNA nanoparticles" . | PLANT BIOTECHNOLOGY JOURNAL 23 . 4 (2025) : 1165-1177 .
APA Lin, Shujin , Zhang, Qian , Bai, Shiyan , Yang, Liwen , Qin, Guannan , Wang, Liyuan et al. Beyond species and spatial boundaries: Enabling long-distance gene silencing in plants via guanidinium-siRNA nanoparticles . | PLANT BIOTECHNOLOGY JOURNAL , 2025 , 23 (4) , 1165-1177 .
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Recent Progress in Radiosensitive Nanomaterials for Radiotherapy-Triggered Drug Release SCIE
期刊论文 | 2025 , 17 (10) , 14801-14821 | ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
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Benefiting from the unique properties of ionizing radiation, such as high tissue penetration, spatiotemporal resolution, and clinical relevance compared with other external stimuli, radiotherapy-induced drug release strategies are showing great promise in developing effective and personalized cancer treatments. However, the requirement of high doses of X-ray irradiation to break chemical bonds for drug release limits the application of radiotherapy-induced prodrug activation in clinics. Recent advances in nanomaterials offer a promising approach for radiotherapy sensitization as well as integrating multiple modalities for improved therapy outcomes. In particular, the catalytic radiosensitization that utilizes electrons and energy generated by nanomaterials upon X-ray irradiation has demonstrated excellent potential for enhanced radiotherapy. In this Review, we summarize the design principles of X-ray-responsive chemical bonds for controlled drug release, strategies for catalytic radiosensitization, and recent progress of X-ray-responsive nanoradiosensitizers for enhanced radiotherapy by integration with chemotherapy, chemodynamic therapy, photodynamic therapy, photothermal therapy, gas therapy, and immunotherapy. Finally, we discuss the challenges of X-ray-responsive nanoradiosensitizers heading toward possible clinical translation. We expect that emerging strategies based on radiotherapy-triggered drug release will facilitate a frontier in accurate and effective cancer therapy in the near future.

Keyword :

combined therapy combined therapy nanomaterials nanomaterials radiosensitive radiosensitive radiotherapy radiotherapy X-ray responsivedrug release X-ray responsivedrug release

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GB/T 7714 Jiang, Renfeng , Fang, Qiong , Liu, Wenjun et al. Recent Progress in Radiosensitive Nanomaterials for Radiotherapy-Triggered Drug Release [J]. | ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES , 2025 , 17 (10) : 14801-14821 .
MLA Jiang, Renfeng et al. "Recent Progress in Radiosensitive Nanomaterials for Radiotherapy-Triggered Drug Release" . | ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES 17 . 10 (2025) : 14801-14821 .
APA Jiang, Renfeng , Fang, Qiong , Liu, Wenjun , Chen, Lanlan , Yang, Huanghao . Recent Progress in Radiosensitive Nanomaterials for Radiotherapy-Triggered Drug Release . | ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES , 2025 , 17 (10) , 14801-14821 .
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Mitochondria-Targeted DNA-Based Nanoprobe for In Situ Monitoring of the Activity of the mtDNA Repair Enzyme and Evaluating Tumor Radiosensitivity SCIE
期刊论文 | 2025 , 97 (1) , 382-391 | ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
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Evaluating tumor radiosensitivity is beneficial for the prediction of treatment efficacy, customization of treatment plans, and minimization of side effects. Tracking the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) repair process helps to assess tumor radiosensitivity as mtDNA repair determines the fate of the cell under radiation-induced mtDNA damage. However, current probes developed to monitor levels of DNA repair enzymes suffered from complex synthesis, uncontrollable preparation, limited tumor selectivity, and poor organelle-targeting ability. Especially, the correlation between mtDNA repair activity and inherent radiosensitivity of tumors has not yet been explored. Here, we present a mitochondria-targeted DNA-based nanoprobe (TPP-Apt-tFNA) for in situ monitoring of the activity of the mtDNA repair enzyme and evaluating tumor radiosensitivity. TPP-Apt-tFNA consists of a DNA tetrahedral framework precisely modified with three functional modules on each of the three vertexes, that is, the tumor cell-targeting aptamer, the mitochondrion-targeting moiety, and the apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease 1 (APE1)-responsive molecule beacon. Once selectively internalized by tumor cells, the nanoprobe targeted the mitochondrion and specifically recognized APE1 to activate fluorescence, allowing the observation of mtDNA repair activity. The nanoprobe showed elevated APE1 levels in the mitochondria of tumor cells under oxidative stress. Moreover, the nanoprobe enabled the illumination of different levels of APE1-mediated mtDNA repair activity in different cell cycle phases. Furthermore, using the nanoprobe in vitro and in vivo, we found that tumor cells with high activity of mtDNA repair, which allowed them to recover from radiation-induced mtDNA lesions, had low sensitivity to radiation and an unsatisfactory radiotherapy outcome. Our work provides a new imaging tool for exploring the roles of mtDNA repair activity in diverse biological processes and for guiding tumor radiation treatment.

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GB/T 7714 Chen, Lanlan , Lai, Jingjing , Dong, Siqi et al. Mitochondria-Targeted DNA-Based Nanoprobe for In Situ Monitoring of the Activity of the mtDNA Repair Enzyme and Evaluating Tumor Radiosensitivity [J]. | ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY , 2025 , 97 (1) : 382-391 .
MLA Chen, Lanlan et al. "Mitochondria-Targeted DNA-Based Nanoprobe for In Situ Monitoring of the Activity of the mtDNA Repair Enzyme and Evaluating Tumor Radiosensitivity" . | ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY 97 . 1 (2025) : 382-391 .
APA Chen, Lanlan , Lai, Jingjing , Dong, Siqi , Liu, Wenjun , Zhang, Ximei , Yang, Huanghao . Mitochondria-Targeted DNA-Based Nanoprobe for In Situ Monitoring of the Activity of the mtDNA Repair Enzyme and Evaluating Tumor Radiosensitivity . | ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY , 2025 , 97 (1) , 382-391 .
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DNA Tetrahedron-Driven Multivalent Proteolysis-Targeting Chimeras: Enhancing Protein Degradation Efficiency and Tumor Targeting SCIE
期刊论文 | 2025 , 147 (2) , 2168-2181 | JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
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Proteolysis-targeting chimeras (PROTACs) are dual-functional molecules composed of a protein of interest (POI) ligand and an E3 ligase ligand connected by a linker, which can recruit POI and E3 ligases simultaneously, thereby inducing the degradation of POI and showing great potential in disease treatment. A challenge in developing PROTACs is the design of linkers and the modification of ligands to establish a multifunctional platform that enhances degradation efficiency and antitumor activity. As a programmable and modifiable nanomaterial, DNA tetrahedron can precisely assemble and selectively recognize molecules and flexibly adjust the distance between molecules, making them ideal linkers. Herein, we developed a multivalent PROTAC based on a DNA tetrahedron, named AS-TD2-PRO. Using DNA tetrahedron as a linker, we combined modules targeting tumor cells, recognizing E3 ligases, and multiple POI together. We took the undruggable target protein signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (STAT3), associated with the etiology and progression in a variety of malignant tumors, as an example in this study. AS-TD2-PRO with two STAT3 recognition modules demonstrated good potential in enhancing tumor-specific targeting and degradation efficiency compared to traditional bivalent PROTACs. Furthermore, in a mouse tumor model, the superior therapeutic activity of AS-TD2-PRO was observed. Overall, DNA tetrahedron-driven multivalent PROTACs both serve as a proof of principle for multifunctional PROTAC design and introduce a promising avenue for cancer treatment strategies.

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GB/T 7714 Li, Shiqing , Zeng, Tao , Wu, Zhixing et al. DNA Tetrahedron-Driven Multivalent Proteolysis-Targeting Chimeras: Enhancing Protein Degradation Efficiency and Tumor Targeting [J]. | JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY , 2025 , 147 (2) : 2168-2181 .
MLA Li, Shiqing et al. "DNA Tetrahedron-Driven Multivalent Proteolysis-Targeting Chimeras: Enhancing Protein Degradation Efficiency and Tumor Targeting" . | JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY 147 . 2 (2025) : 2168-2181 .
APA Li, Shiqing , Zeng, Tao , Wu, Zhixing , Huang, Jiabao , Cao, Xiuping , Liu, Yana et al. DNA Tetrahedron-Driven Multivalent Proteolysis-Targeting Chimeras: Enhancing Protein Degradation Efficiency and Tumor Targeting . | JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY , 2025 , 147 (2) , 2168-2181 .
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Light Triggered "Bacterial Bomb" to Amplify Tumor Pyroptosis SCIE
期刊论文 | 2025 | ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS
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Pyroptosis is gaining attention for its ability to activate the immune system. However, controlling the induction of specific pyroptotic tumor cell death to effectively activate the immune response is a challenge. In this study, a novel "bacterial bomb" platform is developed and designed to precisely regulate tumor cell pyroptosis using light as a trigger, thereby optimizing immune responses. The platform employs Escherichia coli (Ec) as a carrier to introduce gasdermin D (GSDMD) plasmid (pGSDMD) into Ec and adsorb photosensitizer indocyanine green (ICG) on its surface, termed as Ec-pGSDMD-ICG. ICG has photothermal effects (PTE) and photodynamic effects (PDE). Under 808 nm laser irradiation, ICG generates thermal effects and singlet oxygen (O-1(2)), leading to Ec rupture and the release of pGSDMD, which expresses sufficient GSDMD in tumor cells. Furthermore, O-1(2) and lipopolysaccharides (LPS) of Ec activate caspase pathways (caspase-1 and caspase-11), which cleave GSDMD to produce GSDMD-N, thereby inducing pyroptosis and immune responses. Light triggered Ec-pGSDMD-ICG not only efficiently induces pyroptosis in tumor cells with low GSDMD content, but also enhances the pyroptosis in tumor cells with moderate GSDMD content, all while activating the immune system for effective tumor treatment. This approach opens new strategies and research directions for pyroptosis mediated tumor immunotherapy.

Keyword :

bacterial bomb bacterial bomb caspase pathways caspase pathways GSDMD GSDMD immunotherapy immunotherapy pyroptosis pyroptosis

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GB/T 7714 Liu, Yana , Zeng, Tao , Bai, Shiyan et al. Light Triggered "Bacterial Bomb" to Amplify Tumor Pyroptosis [J]. | ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS , 2025 .
MLA Liu, Yana et al. "Light Triggered "Bacterial Bomb" to Amplify Tumor Pyroptosis" . | ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS (2025) .
APA Liu, Yana , Zeng, Tao , Bai, Shiyan , Fang, Xiao , Cao, Xiuping , Li, Shiqing et al. Light Triggered "Bacterial Bomb" to Amplify Tumor Pyroptosis . | ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS , 2025 .
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Surface engineering of NIR-II luminescent gold nanoclusters for brain glioma-targeted imaging SCIE
期刊论文 | 2025 , 17 (17) , 10670-10676 | NANOSCALE
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Ultrasmall gold nanoclusters (AuNCs) with photoluminescence in the second near-infrared region (NIR-II) have emerged as promising probes for in vivo biomedical applications. However, it remains a challenge to utilize NIR-II-emitting AuNCs for imaging brain glioblastoma (GBM), which is highly lethal and hard to diagnose in time. Herein, we have presented systematic investigations on the brain delivery and GBM targeting efficacies of NIR-II-emitting AuNCs protected by different ligands. We first synthesized four types of AuNCs with surface coatings of small thiolated ligands and proteins, and then studied their in vitro penetration capability into the blood-brain barrier (BBB) and in vivo GBM targeting performances. It was found that the BBB permeability of AuNCs determined by the in vitro transwell model was not evidently affected by the surface ligands. Significantly, AuNCs protected by albumin exhibited notably extended blood circulation and less skull binding compared to those protected by small ligands, enabling superior in vivo brain GBM-targeted NIR-II PL imaging. We also modified the albumin-AuNCs with targeting peptides to improve in vivo imaging contrast. Additionally, AuNCs had negligible toxic effects on major organs as well as brain tissues and neurons, corroborating their good biocompatibility. This study examined the surface engineering of NIR-II luminescent AuNCs for brain GBM targeting, which may offer insights into the future design of AuNCs for bioapplications.

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GB/T 7714 Tong, Shufen , Liu, Jie , Chen, Yonghui et al. Surface engineering of NIR-II luminescent gold nanoclusters for brain glioma-targeted imaging [J]. | NANOSCALE , 2025 , 17 (17) : 10670-10676 .
MLA Tong, Shufen et al. "Surface engineering of NIR-II luminescent gold nanoclusters for brain glioma-targeted imaging" . | NANOSCALE 17 . 17 (2025) : 10670-10676 .
APA Tong, Shufen , Liu, Jie , Chen, Yonghui , Xiao, Xinyun , Li, Shihua , Song, Xiaorong et al. Surface engineering of NIR-II luminescent gold nanoclusters for brain glioma-targeted imaging . | NANOSCALE , 2025 , 17 (17) , 10670-10676 .
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Self-assembling chemically modified siRNA nanorings for RNAi therapy and neuroprotection in Alzheimer's disease SCIE
期刊论文 | 2025 , 68 (6) , 2552-2564 | SCIENCE CHINA-CHEMISTRY
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The development of RNA interference (RNAi) therapy offers a potential solution for Alzheimer's disease (AD). However, the brain-blood barrier (BBB) with its selective permeability and pharmacokinetic-related challenges poses restrictions on the delivery of small interfering RNA (siRNA) to the central nervous system (CNS). In this study, we demonstrate that the incorporation of 2 '-fluoro (2 '-F) substitutions and L-carnitine modification facilitates the self-assembly of siRNA through triple interaction, leading to the formation of nanorings, called LCSF-NR. Based on the enhanced cellular uptake and lysosomal escape by 2 '-F substitution and the transport across the BBB promoted by L-carnitine, the nanorings realized the improved brain-targeted delivery of siRNA, both in zebrafish and mice models. Moreover, our findings highlight the therapeutic potential of LCSF-NR formulation in an AD zebrafish model through a synergistic effect of downregulating the beta-site APP cleavage enzyme 1 (BACE1) gene and L-carnitine-mediated neuroprotection, effectively inhibiting pathological processes. Overall, these results suggest that the chemical modification-based siRNA self-assembly strategy enables trans-BBB delivery and presents a concise approach for synergistic therapy of AD.

Keyword :

Alzheimer's disease Alzheimer's disease blood-brain barrier blood-brain barrier chemical modification chemical modification self-assembly self-assembly siRNA siRNA

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GB/T 7714 Jiang, Yifan , Li, Lisha , Fang, Xiao et al. Self-assembling chemically modified siRNA nanorings for RNAi therapy and neuroprotection in Alzheimer's disease [J]. | SCIENCE CHINA-CHEMISTRY , 2025 , 68 (6) : 2552-2564 .
MLA Jiang, Yifan et al. "Self-assembling chemically modified siRNA nanorings for RNAi therapy and neuroprotection in Alzheimer's disease" . | SCIENCE CHINA-CHEMISTRY 68 . 6 (2025) : 2552-2564 .
APA Jiang, Yifan , Li, Lisha , Fang, Xiao , Zeng, Tao , Su, Lichao , Liu, Yichang et al. Self-assembling chemically modified siRNA nanorings for RNAi therapy and neuroprotection in Alzheimer's disease . | SCIENCE CHINA-CHEMISTRY , 2025 , 68 (6) , 2552-2564 .
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An enzyme-gated bioorthogonal catalytic nanoreactor for tumor-specific prodrug activation SCIE
期刊论文 | 2025 , 18 (2) | NANO RESEARCH
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Bioorthogonal catalysis mediated by abiotic transition metal catalysts (TMCs) is emerging as a momentum- gathering strategy for in situ generation of therapeutics. However, the unpredictable leakage and deposition of TMCs in living systems easily lead to nonspecific exposure of catalysts and concomitant off-target prodrug activation. Herein, we propose an enzyme-gated bioorthogonal catalytic nanoreactor constructed from hyaluronic acid (HA)-coated dendritic mesoporous silica nanoparticles (DMSNs), where the latter serves as a host for robustly immobilizing organometallic Ru(II) catalysts via covalent interactions. The covalent immobilization of catalysts within the nanoscaffold effectively avoids nonspecific metal leakage under biological conditions. Importantly, the grafted HA not only acts as a "gatekeeper" preventing unintended catalyst exposure in nontargeted tissues but also acts as a ligand targeting CD44 overexpressed cancer cells. Upon receptor-mediated endocytosis into tumor cells, HA is degraded by the overexpressed hyaluronidase-1, leading to the channel opening of the nanoreactors and hence gaining the accessibility of Ru(II) complexes to prodrugs. The therapeutic potency of this enzyme-gated nanoreactor in mediating site- specific activation of caged prodrugs was systematically demonstrated both in cellular settings and in tumor-bearing murine models. This enzyme-gated strategy enhances the efficacy of localized treatment while avoiding off-target prodrug activation, paving the way for advancing bioorthogonal catalysis for disease management in a safe and effective way.

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bioorthogonal catalysis bioorthogonal catalysis cancer therapy cancer therapy catalyst immobilization catalyst immobilization enzyme-gated enzyme-gated prodrugs prodrugs

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GB/T 7714 Guo, Yuheng , Jiang, Fang , Zhu, Xiaohui et al. An enzyme-gated bioorthogonal catalytic nanoreactor for tumor-specific prodrug activation [J]. | NANO RESEARCH , 2025 , 18 (2) .
MLA Guo, Yuheng et al. "An enzyme-gated bioorthogonal catalytic nanoreactor for tumor-specific prodrug activation" . | NANO RESEARCH 18 . 2 (2025) .
APA Guo, Yuheng , Jiang, Fang , Zhu, Xiaohui , He, Wen , Song, Sijie , Shou, Xuecen et al. An enzyme-gated bioorthogonal catalytic nanoreactor for tumor-specific prodrug activation . | NANO RESEARCH , 2025 , 18 (2) .
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