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Intranasal nanophotosensitizer enables safe and broad-spectrum photodynamic inactivation of respiratory viruses

Authors
Han, SunmiSeitkazina, AsselHeo, JeongyunKim, Se-youngKim, SuJinJeon, Sung-HoPark, Yung HunLim, TaehunKim, BohyeonRajoriya, ShivaniLuu, Quy SonLee, YoungbokLee, Yong-DeokChoi, HonghwanKim, Won-KeunKim, Hyun JikKim, Sehoon
Issue Date
Nov-2025
Publisher
Elsevier B.V.
Keywords
Broad-spectrum antiviral; Intranasal delivery; Methylene blue nanoparticle; Nanophotosensitizer; Nanotheranostics; Photodynamic inactivation; Respiratory viruses; Singlet oxygen
Citation
Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology B: Biology, v.272
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology B: Biology
Volume
272
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/erica/handle/2021.sw.erica/126583
DOI
10.1016/j.jphotobiol.2025.113261
ISSN
1011-1344
1873-2682
Abstract
The emergence of highly transmissible respiratory viruses, including SARS-CoV-2 and its variants, emphasizes the urgent need for safe, variant-agnostic, and self-administered antiviral strategies. Here, we present a nanotheranostic platform (MBSD) based on methylene blue nanoparticles stabilized with a primary fatty acid naturally found in human nasal mucosa, designed for intranasal photodynamic inactivation (PDI). This nanoformulation enhances cellular permeability and singlet oxygen generation at sites of viral infection through strategic ion pairing and micellization using clinically approved excipients. MBSD demonstrated superior uptake and intracellular singlet oxygen generation in human nasal epithelial cells compared to free methylene blue. Upon exposure to red light, PDI treatment with MBSD significantly reduced viral gene expression and infectivity across multiple RNA and DNA viruses—including influenza A, SARS-CoV-2 variants (B.1 and Delta), Zika, Vaccinia, and emerging paramyxoviruses—with sub-nanomolar to low-nanomolar EC₅₀ values. In murine models, a single intranasal MBSD-mediated PDI treatment attenuated disease progression, markedly reduced lung viral burden and inflammation, and improved survival outcomes. In addition, repeated PDI treatments showed no detectable toxicity to normal mucosal tissues, indicating a favorable safety profile. These findings highlight MBSD-mediated PDI as a clinically translatable, non-invasive nanomedicine strategy that offers broad-spectrum antiviral efficacy and mucosal safety, supporting its potential as a frontline theranostic intervention for early-stage management of respiratory virus outbreaks.
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