info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Photosensitizer-dendrimer systems in anticancer treatments: From photophysics to PDT applications
Fecha
2021Registro en:
Arbeloa, Ernesto Maximiliano; Militello, María Paula; Bertolotti, Sonia Graciela; Previtali, Carlos Mario; Photosensitizer-dendrimer systems in anticancer treatments: From photophysics to PDT applications; Academic Press; 2021; 311-326
978-0-12-821250-9
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Arbeloa, Ernesto Maximiliano
Militello, María Paula
Bertolotti, Sonia Graciela
Previtali, Carlos Mario
Resumen
Photodynamic therapy (PDT) is a modern form of treatment of cancers and other diseases. It is based on the use of a photosensitizer (PS), a molecule that after absorbing light generates reactive oxygen species with the potential to cause the destruction of the target tumoral cells. A great deal of research in this area has improved the efficiency of the process and eliminated its side effects by properly combining PS with nanomaterials. In this context, dendrimers are excellent candidates because their highly branched 3D architectures allow them to form a wide variety of supramolecular assemblies with PSs (PS-Ds) either covalently or by complexation, which possess a number of advantages for PDT application. This chapter reviews the recent progress in the development of PS-Ds systems, their photophysical characterization and achievements in PDT technology.