As a novel noninvasive therapeutic modality combining low-intensity ultrasound and sonosensitizers, sonodynamic therapy (SDT) is promising for clinical translation due to its high tissue-penetrating capability to treat deeper lesions intractable by photodynamic therapy (PDT), which suffers from the major limitation of low tissue penetration depth of light. The effectiveness and feasibility of SDT are regarded to rely on not only the development of stable and flexible SDT apparatus, but also the screening of sonosensitizers with good specificity and safety. To give an outlook of the development of SDT equipment, the key technologies are discussed according to five aspects including ultrasonic dose settings, sonosensitizer screening, tumor positioning, temperature monitoring, and reactive oxygen species (ROS) detection. In addition, some state-of-the-art SDT multifunctional equipment integrating diagnosis and treatment for accurate SDT are introduced. Further, an overview of the development of sonosensitizers is provided from small molecular sensitizers to nano/microenhanced sensitizers. Several types of nanomaterial-augmented SDT are in discussion, including porphyrin-based nanomaterials, porphyrin-like nanomaterials, inorganic nanomaterials, and organic-inorganic hybrid nanomaterials with different strategies to improve SDT therapeutic efficacy. There is no doubt that the rapid development and clinical translation of sonodynamic therapy will be promoted by advanced equipment, smart nanomaterial-based sonosensitizer, and multidisciplinary collaboration.
Inflammation
is an immunological response involved in various inflammatory
disorders ranging from neurodegenerative diseases to cancers. Luminol
has been reported to detect myeloperoxidase (MPO) activity in an inflamed
area through a light-emitting reaction. However, this method is limited
by low tissue penetration and poor spatial resolution. Here, we fabricated
a nanobubble (NB) doped with two tandem lipophilic dyes, red-shifting
luminol-emitted blue light to near-infrared region through a process
integrating bioluminescence resonance energy transfer (BRET) and fluorescence
resonance energy transfer (FRET). This BRET–FRET process caused
a 24-fold increase in detectable luminescence emission over luminol
alone in an inflammation model induced by lipopolysaccharide. In addition,
the echogenicity of the BRET–FRET NBs also enables perfused
tissue microvasculature to be delineated by contrast-enhanced ultrasound
imaging with high spatial resolution. Compared with commercially available
ultrasound contrast agent, the BRET–FRET NBs exhibited comparable
contrast-enhancing capability but much smaller size and higher concentration.
This bioluminescence/ultrasound dual-modal contrast agent was then
successfully applied for imaging of an animal model of breast cancer.
Furthermore, biosafety experiments revealed that multi-injection of
luminol and NBs did not induce any observable abnormality. By integrating
the advantages of bioluminescence imaging and ultrasound imaging,
this BRET–FRET system may have the potential to address a critical
need of inflammation imaging.
Electrospinning of natural polymer nanofibers useful for biomedical applications often requires the use of cytotoxic organic solvents. In this study, gelatin nanofibers are electrospun from phosphate buffer saline/ethanol binary mixtures as a benign solvent at ambient temperature. The influences of ionic strength, ethanol concentration, and gelatin concentration on the electrospinnability of gelatin solutions and the fiber microarchitectures are analyzed. The electrospun scaffolds retain their morphologies during vapor-phase crosslinking with glutaraldehyde in ethanol and the subsequent removal of salts contained in the nanofibers via water rinsing. When fully hydrated, the mechanically preconditioned scaffolds display a Young's modulus of 25.5 ± 5.3 kPa, tensile strength of 55.5 ± 13.9 kPa, deformability of 160 ± 15%, and resilience of 89.9 ± 1.8%. When cultured on the gelatin scaffolds, 3T3 fibroblasts displayed spindle-like morphology, similar to the cell's normal morphology in a 3D extracellular matrix.
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