Although photodynamic
therapy (PDT) has been an attractive strategy
for several cancer treatments in the clinical setting, PDT efficacy
is attenuated by consumption of oxygen. To address this photodynamic
issue, we adopted a phototherapy–chemotherapy combination strategy
based on targeted delivery of the near-infrared photosensitizer indocyanine
green (ICG), photothermal conversion agent polydopamine (PDA), and
tirapazamine (TPZ), a hypoxia-activated prodrug. Under laser irradiation,
ICG consumption of oxygen and aggravated hypoxia in tumor sites can
activate TPZ to damage DNA. In parallel, ICG produces reactive oxygen
species which work in synergy with PDA to enhance phototherapeutic
efficiency. Herein, hybrid CaCO3/TPGS nanoparticles delivering
ICG, PDA, and TPZ (ICG-PDA-TPZ NPs) were designed for effective and
safe cancer therapy. ICG-PDA-TPZ NPs showed significantly improved
cellular uptake and accumulation in tumors. Furthermore, we demonstrated
that ICG-PDA-TPZ NPs showed intensive photodynamic and photothermal
effects in vitro and in vivo, which synergized with TPZ in subcutaneous
U87 malignant glioma growth and orthotopic B16F10 tumor inhibition,
with negligible side effects. Thus, ICG-PDA-TPZ NPs could be an effective
strategy for improvement of PDT.
Lysobacter are ubiquitous environmental bacteria emerging as novel biocontrol agents and new sources of anti-infectives. So far, very little effort has been invested in the study of the biology of these Gram-negative gliding bacteria. Many Lysobacter species are characterized by their yellow-orange appearance. Using transposon mutagenesis, we identified a stand-alone polyketide synthase (PKS) gene cluster required for the pigment production in L. enzymogenes OH11. The yellow pigments were abolished in the “white” mutants generated by target-specific deletions of ketosynthase (KS), acyl carrier protein, or ketoreductase. Spectroscopic data suggested that the pigments belong to xanthomonadin-like aryl polyenes. Polyene-type polyketides are known to be biosynthesized by modular PKS (Type I), not by stand-alone PKS (Type II) which always contain the heterodimer KS-CLF (chain-length factor) as the key catalytic component. Remarkably, this aryl polyene PKS complex only contains the KS (ORF17), but not the CLF. Instead, a hypothetical protein (ORF16) is located immediately next to ORF17. ORF16–17 homologs are widespread in numerous uncharacterized microbial genomes, in which an ORF17 homolog is always accompanied by an ORF16 homolog. The deletion of ORF16 eliminated pigment production, and homology modeling suggested that ORF16 shares a structural similarity to the N-terminal half of CLF. A point-mutation of glutamine (Q166A) that is the conserved active site of known CLF abolished pigment production. The “white” mutants are significantly more sensitive to UV/visible light radiation or H2O2 treatment than the wild type. These results unveil the first example of Type II PKS-synthesized polyene pigments and show that the metabolites serve as Lysobacter “sunscreens” that are important for the survival of these ubiquitous environmental organisms.
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