Tumor hypoxia seriously impairs the therapeutic outcomes of type II photodynamic therapy (PDT), which is highly dependent upon tissue oxygen concentration. Herein, a facile strategy of acceptor planarization and donor rotation is proposed to design type I photosensitizers (PSs) and photothermal reagents. Acceptor planarization can not only enforce intramolecular charge transfer to redshift NIR absorption but also transfer the type of PSs from type II to type I photochemical pathways. Donor rotation optimizes photothermal conversion efficiency (PCE). Accordingly, three 3,6-divinylsubstituted diketopyrrolopyrrole (DPP) derivatives, 2TPAVDPP, TPATPEVDPP, and 2TPEVDPP, with different number of rotors were prepared. Experimental results showed that three compounds were excellent type I PSs, and the corresponding 2TPEVDPP nanoparticles (NPs) with the most rotors possessed the highest PCE. The photophysical properties of 2TPEVDPP NPs are particularly suitable for in vivo NIR fluorescence imaging-guided synergistic PDT/PTT therapy. The proposed strategy is helpful for exploiting type I phototherapeutic reagents with high efficacy for synergistic PDT and PTT.
DTAT may have potential for intracranial glioblastoma therapy because of its ability to target tumor cells and tumor vasculature simultaneously and its apparent lack of systemic effects.
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