Abstract
While nanozyme-mediated catalytic therapy holds promise for precision oncology, achieving spatiotemporal control over enzymatic activity and synergistic therapeutic amplification in the biologically favorable second near-infrared window (NIR-II) remains an unmet challenge. In this study, we present a breakthrough in plasmonic heterojunction engineering through the rational design of asymmetric dumbbell-shaped Au nanorod@end-mesoporous Pd architectures that establish a high density of plasmonic hotspots at the mesopore sites. Unlike conventional core-shell configurations (Au@mesoPd) showing negligible NIR-II response, our heterostructure demonstrates a nearly 200% enhancement in peroxidase-like activity under 1064 nm excitation through precisely engineered hot electron dynamics. Time-resolved absorption spectroscopy and COMSOL simulations reveal that the unique terminal deposition of mesoporous Pd domains creates high-density electromagnetic hotspots (>200% field enhancement vs core-shell) while maintaining efficient charge transfer channels─synergistically boosting both hot carrier generation and catalytic turnover frequency. This nanoarchitecture integrates NIR-II photoacoustic navigation with a triple therapeutic modality, combining plasmon-enhanced photothermal ablation, Pd-mediated catalytic therapy, and chemotherapy, which holds great potential for NIR-II-triggered synergistic multimodal cancer therapy.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 29198-29209 |
Number of pages | 12 |
Journal | ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces |
Volume | 17 |
Issue number | 20 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - 21 May 2025 |
Keywords
- hot electrons
- nanozymes
- second near-infrared window
- stimuli-responsivity
- synergistic therapy