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Surface Biomodification of Liposomes and Polymersomes for Efficient Targeted Drug Delivery.

Hichem MoulahoumFaezeh GhorbanizamaniFigen ZihniogluSuna Timur
Published in: Bioconjugate chemistry (2021)
Chemotherapy has seen great progress in the development of performant treatment strategies. Nanovesicles such as liposomes and polymersomes demonstrated great potential in cancer therapy. However, these nanocarriers deliver their content passively, which faces a lot of constraints during blood circulation. The main challenge resides in degradation and random delivery to normal tissues. Hence, targeting drug delivery using specific molecules (such as antibodies) grafted over the surface of these nanocarriers came as the answer to overcome many problems faced before. The advantage of using antibodies is their antigen/antibody recognition, which provides a high level of specificity to reach treatment targets. This review discusses the many techniques of nanocarrier functionalization with antibodies. The aim is to recognize the various approaches by describing their advantages and deficiencies to create the most suitable drug delivery platform. Some methods are more suitable for other applications rather than drug delivery, which can explain the low success of some proposed targeted nanocarriers. In here, a critical analysis of how every method could impact the recognition and targeting capacity of some nanocarriers (liposomes and polymersomes) is discussed to make future research more impactful and advance the field of biomedicine further.
Keyphrases
  • drug delivery
  • cancer therapy
  • drug release
  • mental health
  • gene expression
  • risk assessment
  • replacement therapy
  • climate change
  • locally advanced