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

Author:

Li Bin1,Wang Wei2,Zhao Lu1,Li Mengjun2,Yan Dingyuan3,Li Xiaoxue4,Zhang Jie4,Gao Qiuxia4,Feng Yi4,Zheng Judun4,Shu Bowen4,Yan Yan4,Wang Jiamei2,Wang Huanhuan4,He Lingjie4,Wu Yunxia1,Zhou Sitong1,Qin Xinchi1,Chen Wentao5,Qiu Kaizhen5,Shen Chenguang2,Wang Dong3,Tang Ben Zhong36,Liao Yuhui4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Burn Surgery Department of Clinical Laboratory Institute of Translational Medicine The First People's Hospital of Foshan Foshan Guangdong 528000 China

2. BSL‐3 Laboratory (Guangdong) Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Tropical Disease Research School of Public Health Department of Laboratory Medicine Zhujiang Hospital, Southern Medical University Guangzhou Guangdong 510515 China

3. Center for AIE Research Shenzhen Key Laboratory of Polymer Science and Technology, Guangdong Research Center for Interfacial Engineering of Functional Materials College of Materials Science and Engineering Shenzhen University Shenzhen Guangdong 518060 China

4. Molecular Diagnosis and Treatment Center for Infectious Diseases Dermatology Hospital of Southern Medical University Guangzhou Guangdong 510091 China

5. The First Clinical Medical College Guangdong Medical University Zhanjiang Guangdong 524000 China

6. School of Science and Engineering Shenzhen Institute of Aggregate Science and Technology The Chinese University of Hong Kong Shenzhen Guangdong 518172 China

Abstract

AbstractThe 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.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

National Key Research and Development Program of China

China Postdoctoral Science Foundation

Basic and Applied Basic Research Foundation of Guangdong Province

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,General Materials Science

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