Issue 61, 2012

Recent advances in stimuli-responsive degradable block copolymer micelles: synthesis and controlled drug delivery applications

Abstract

(Bio)degradation in response to external stimuli (stimuli-responsive degradation, SRD) is a desired property in constructing novel nanostructured materials. For polymer-based multifunctional drug delivery applications, the degradation enables fast and controlled release of encapsulated therapeutic drugs from delivery vehicles in targeted cells. It also ensures the clearance of the empty device after drugs are delivered to the body. This review summarizes recent development of various strategies to the design and synthesis of self-assembled micellar aggregates based on novel amphiphilic block copolymers having different numbers of stimuli-responsive cleavable elements at various locations. These cleavable linkages including disulfide, acid-labile, and photo-cleavable linkages are incorporated into micelles, and then are cleaved in response to cellular triggers such as reductive reaction, light, and low acid. The well-designed SRD micelles have been explored as controlled/enhanced delivery vehicles of drugs and genes. For future design and development of effective stimuli-responsive degradable micelles toward tumor-targeting delivery applications in vivo, a high degree of control over degradation for tunable release of encapsulated anticancer drugs as well as bioconjugation for active tumor-targeting is required.

Graphical abstract: Recent advances in stimuli-responsive degradable block copolymer micelles: synthesis and controlled drug delivery applications

Article information

Article type
Feature Article
Submitted
03 Apr 2012
Accepted
25 May 2012
First published
25 May 2012

Chem. Commun., 2012,48, 7542-7552

Recent advances in stimuli-responsive degradable block copolymer micelles: synthesis and controlled drug delivery applications

Q. Zhang, N. Re Ko and J. Kwon Oh, Chem. Commun., 2012, 48, 7542 DOI: 10.1039/C2CC32408C

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