“…Antimicrobial PhotoDynamic Therapy (aPDT) relies on the application of a photosensitizer able to absorb appropriate wavelengths in the visible light range and to react with oxygen molecules inside and around cells, resulting in the production of singlet oxygen or other cytotoxic reactive oxygen species (ROS), which lead to cell death, after inducing photodamage. aPDT can efficiently kill a wide range of bacteria (both antibiotic-susceptible and multi-resistant strains), viruses, fungal, and protozoan parasites (Smijs and Pavel, 2011;Thomas et al, 2015;Wang et al, 2017;Alves et al, 2018;Andrade et al, 2018;Namvar et al, 2019) without causing development of resistance (Al-Mutairi et al, 2018;Ma et al, 2018). This approach is particularly advantageous against bacteria naturally producing and accumulating endogenous photosensitizers such as porphyrins and flavins (Plavskii et al, 2018), physiologically involved in several essential biological functions (e.g., respiration, biological oxidation, photosynthesis, sulfate reduction, metabolism of fats, carbohydrates, and proteins) (Shu et al, 2013;García-Angulo, 2017;Sepúlveda Cisternas et al, 2018).…”