Issue 2, 2012

Strategies in biomimetic surface engineering of nanoparticles for biomedical applications

Abstract

Engineered nanoparticles (NPs) play an increasingly important role in biomedical sciences and in nanomedicine. Yet, in spite of significant advances, it remains difficult to construct drug-loaded NPs with precisely defined therapeutic effects, in terms of release time and spatial targeting. The body is a highly complex system that imposes multiple physiological and cellular barriers to foreign objects. Upon injection in the blood stream or following oral administation, NPs have to bypass numerous barriers prior to reaching their intended target. A particularly successful design strategy consists in masking the NP to the biological environment by covering it with an outer surface mimicking the composition and functionality of the cell’s external membrane. This review describes this biomimetic approach. First, we outline key features of the composition and function of the cell membrane. Then, we present recent developments in the fabrication of molecules that mimic biomolecules present on the cell membrane, such as proteins, peptides, and carbohydrates. We present effective strategies to link such bioactive molecules to the NPs surface and we highlight the power of this approach by presenting some exciting examples of biomimetically engineered NPs useful for multimodal diagnostics and for target-specific drug/gene delivery applications. Finally, critical directions for future research and applications of biomimetic NPs are suggested to the readers.

Graphical abstract: Strategies in biomimetic surface engineering of nanoparticles for biomedical applications

Article information

Article type
Feature Article
Submitted
14 Sep 2011
Accepted
20 Oct 2011
First published
02 Dec 2011

Nanoscale, 2012,4, 360-368

Strategies in biomimetic surface engineering of nanoparticles for biomedical applications

Y. Gong and F. M. Winnik, Nanoscale, 2012, 4, 360 DOI: 10.1039/C1NR11297J

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