Aggregation‐Induced Emission‐Based Macrophage‐Like Nanoparticles for Targeted Photothermal Therapy and Virus Transmission Blockage in Monkeypox

Bin Li(First People's Hospital of Foshan), Wei Wang(Zhujiang Hospital), Lu Zhao(First People's Hospital of Foshan), Mengjun Li(Zhujiang Hospital), Dingyuan Yan(Shenzhen University), Xiaoxue Li(Southern Medical University), Jie Zhang(Southern Medical University), Qiuxia Gao(Southern Medical University), Yi Feng(Southern Medical University), Judun Zheng(Southern Medical University), Bowen Shu(Southern Medical University), Yan Yan(Southern Medical University), Jiamei Wang(Zhujiang Hospital), Huanhuan Wang(Southern Medical University), Lingjie He(Southern Medical University), Yunxia Wu(First People's Hospital of Foshan), Sitong Zhou(First People's Hospital of Foshan), Xinchi Qin(First People's Hospital of Foshan), Wentao Chen(Guangdong Medical College), Kaizhen Qiu(Guangdong Medical College), Chenguang Shen(Zhujiang Hospital), Dong Wang(Shenzhen University), Ben Zhong Tang(Shenzhen University), Yuhui Liao(Southern Medical University)
Advanced Materials
November 6, 2023
Cited by 127

Abstract

The recent prevalence of monkeypox has led to the declaration of a Public Health Emergency of International Concern. Monkeypox lesions are typically ulcers or pustules (containing high titers of replication-competent virus) in the skin and mucous membranes, which allow monkeypox virus to transmit predominantly through intimate contact. Currently, effective clinical treatments for monkeypox are lacking, and strategies for blocking virus transmission are fraught with drawbacks. Herein, this work constructs a biomimetic nanotemplate (termed TBD@M NPs) with macrophage membranes as the coat and polymeric nanoparticles loading a versatile aggregation-induced emission featured photothermal molecule TPE-BT-DPTQ as the core. In a surrogate mouse model of monkeypox (vaccinia-virus-infected tail scarification model), intravenously injected TBD@M NPs show precise tracking and near-infrared region II fluorescence imaging of the lesions. Upon 808 nm laser irradiation, the virus is eliminated by the photothermal effect and the infected wound heals rapidly. More importantly, the inoculation of treated lesion tissue suspensions does not trigger tail infection or inflammatory activation in healthy mice, indicating successful blockage of virus transmission. This study demonstrates for the first time monkeypox theranostics using nanomedicine, and may bring a new insight into the development of a viable strategy for monkeypox management in clinical trials.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis