The tumor microenvironment (TME) has been increasingly recognized as a crucial contributor to tumorigenesis. Based on the unique TME for achieving tumor‐specific therapy, here a novel concept of photothermal‐enhanced sequential nanocatalytic therapy in both NIR‐I and NIR‐II biowindows is proposed, which innovatively changes the condition of nanocatalytic Fenton reaction for production of highly efficient hydroxyl radicals (•OH) and consequently suppressing the tumor growth. Evidence suggests that glucose plays a vital role in powering cancer progression. Encouraged by the oxidation of glucose to gluconic acid and H2O2 by glucose oxidase (GOD), an Fe3O4/GOD‐functionalized polypyrrole (PPy)‐based composite nanocatalyst is constructed to achieve diagnostic imaging‐guided, photothermal‐enhanced, and TME‐specific sequential nanocatalytic tumor therapy. The consumption of intratumoral glucose by GOD leads to the in situ elevation of the H2O2 level, and the integrated Fe3O4 component then catalyzes H2O2 into highly toxic •OH to efficiently induce cancer‐cell death. Importantly, the high photothermal‐conversion efficiency (66.4% in NIR‐II biowindow) of the PPy component elevates the local tumor temperature in both NIR‐I and NIR‐II biowindows to substaintially accelerate and improve the nanocatalytic disproportionation degree of H2O2 for enhancing the nanocatalytic‐therapeutic efficacy, which successfully achieves a remarkable synergistic anticancer outcome with minimal side effects.
The emerging metal single‐atom catalyst has aroused extensive attention in multiple fields, such as clean energy, environmental protection, and biomedicine. Unfortunately, though it has been shown to be highly active, the origins of the activity of the single‐atom sites remain unrevealed to date owing to the lack of deep insight on electronic level. Now, partially oxidized Ni single‐atom sites were constructed in polymeric carbon nitride (CN), which elevates the photocatalytic performance by over 30‐fold. The 3d orbital of the partially oxidized Ni single‐atom sites is filled with unpaired d‐electrons, which are ready to be excited under irradiation. Such an electron configuration results in elevated light response, conductivity, charge separation, and mobility of the photocatalyst concurrently, thus largely augmenting the photocatalytic performance.
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