Chemical Reactions Trigger Peptide Self-Assembly in vivo for Tumor Therapy.
Xiang-Zhong ZengHong-Wei AnHao WangPublished in: ChemMedChem (2021)
Self-assembly peptide materials have promoted the development of science research including life science, optics, medicine, and catalysis over the past two decades. Especially in tumor treatment, peptide self-assembly strategies have exhibited promising potential by their high degree of biocompatibility, construction modularization, and diversity in structure controllability. Driven by physical and chemical triggers, peptides can self-assemble in vivo to form fibers, spheres, hydrogels, or ribbons to achieve predeterminate biological functions. Peptide self-assembly triggered by chemical reactions provides superior specificity and intelligent responsiveness to produce assembly-induced biological effects in target regions. Herein, from the perspective of triggers of peptide assembly, we briefly review the applications of in vivo peptide self-assembly strategies for tumor treatment, including tumor-pathology-factor-induced chemical reactions and bio-orthogonal reactions.