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Low-coordination Mn single-atom nanozymes enable imaging-guided cancer therapy

A research team led by Prof. Wang Hui from the Hefei Institutes of 麻豆淫院ical Science (HFIPS) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), in collaboration with researchers led by Prof. Qian Junchao from HFIPS and Prof. Qu Songnan from the University of Macau, has successfully developed a novel low-coordination single-atom manganese nanozyme using a unique "molecular carbonization-reduction" strategy.
The work, aided by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) measurements at the Steady-State Strong Magnetic Field Facility (SHMFF), has been .
Traditional metal-nitrogen (M-Nx) single-atom catalysts are typically found in stable M-N4 configurations. However, these structures have limited active sites and tend to lose intermediates during catalytic processes due to weak substrate binding, which hampers overall catalytic performance.
To address this, the researchers developed a new strategy that carefully selects molecular ligands to chelate with manganese atoms, creating single-atom manganese-doped carbon dots (SA Mn-CDs) with a low-coordinated Mn-N2 configuration.
These ultrasmall SA Mn-CDs feature atomically dispersed manganese centers, excellent water solubility, and strong biocompatibility. More importantly, they demonstrate high peroxidase-like catalytic activity by effectively mediating Fenton-like reactions, a performance confirmed via advanced EPR analysis.
The material also exhibits remarkable near-infrared (NIR) fluorescence imaging capabilities at both cellular and animal levels, enabling precise, image-guided tumor catalytic therapy.
This study highlights the immense potential of low-coordination manganese-based nanozymes for NIR-guided cancer therapy and underscores the critical importance of atomic-scale structural design in advancing single-atom catalytic therapy for biomedical applications.
More information: Peiwei Jin et al, Low鈥怌oordination Configuration Single鈥怉tom Manganese Nanozymes for NIR鈥怚maging鈥怬riented Efficient Catalytic Oncotherapy, Advanced Science (2025).
Journal information: Advanced Science
Provided by Chinese Academy of Sciences