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Recent Progress in Micro/Nanoreactors toward the Creation of Artificial Organelles.

Maria Godoy-GallardoMaria J York-DuranLeticia Hosta-Rigau
Published in: Advanced healthcare materials (2017)
Artificial organelles created from a bottom up approach are a new type of engineered materials, which are not designed to be living but, instead, to mimic some specific functions inside cells. By doing so, artificial organelles are expected to become a powerful tool in biomedicine. They can act as nanoreactors to convert a prodrug into a drug inside the cells or as carriers encapsulating therapeutic enzymes to replace malfunctioning organelles in pathological conditions. For the design of artificial organelles, several requirements need to be fulfilled: a compartmentalized structure that can encapsulate the synthetic machinery to perform an enzymatic function, as well as a means to allow for communication between the interior of the artificial organelle and the external environment, so that substrates and products can diffuse in and out the carrier allowing for continuous enzymatic reactions. The most recent and exciting advances in architectures that fulfill the aforementioned requirements are featured in this review. Artificial organelles are classified depending on their constituting materials, being lipid and polymer-based systems the most prominent ones. Finally, special emphasis will be put on the intracellular response of these newly emerging systems.
Keyphrases
  • induced apoptosis
  • cell cycle arrest
  • hydrogen peroxide
  • oxidative stress
  • endoplasmic reticulum stress
  • cell death
  • cell proliferation
  • low grade
  • signaling pathway