{Reference Type}: Journal Article {Title}: Photosynthetic bacteria-based whole-cell inorganic-biohybrid system for multimodal enhanced tumor radiotherapy. {Author}: Hua S;Zhao J;Li L;Liu C;Zhou L;Li K;Huang Q;Zhou M;Wang K; {Journal}: J Nanobiotechnology {Volume}: 22 {Issue}: 1 {Year}: 2024 Jun 28 {Factor}: 9.429 {DOI}: 10.1186/s12951-024-02654-7 {Abstract}: The whole-cell inorganic-biohybrid systems show special functions and wide potential in biomedical application owing to the exceptional interactions between microbes and inorganic materials. However, the hybrid systems are still in stage of proof of concept. Here, we report a whole-cell inorganic-biohybrid system composed of Spirulina platensis and gold nanoclusters (SP-Au), which can enhance the cancer radiotherapy through multiple pathways, including cascade photocatalysis. Such systems can first produce oxygen under light irradiation, then convert some of the oxygen to superoxide anion (•O2-), and further oxidize the glutathione (GSH) in tumor cells. With the combination of hypoxic regulation, •O2- production, GSH oxidation, and the radiotherapy sensitization of gold nanoclusters, the final radiation is effectively enhanced, which show the best antitumor efficacy than other groups in both 4T1 and A549 tumor models. Moreover, in vivo distribution experiments show that the SP-Au can accumulate in the tumor and be rapidly metabolized through biodegradation, further indicating its application potential as a new multiway enhanced radiotherapy sensitizer.