Litcius/Paper detail

Self-immolative polymers in biomedicine

Yue Xiao, Xuyu Tan, Zhaohui Li, Ke Zhang

2020Journal of Materials Chemistry B53 citationsDOI

Abstract

Self-immolative polymers (SIPs) have been under development for over a decade, and efforts for their application followed shortly after their inception. One main area of application of SIPs is biomedicine, where they are used to construct devices and biosensors, develop new biotechnology abilities, or directly interface with the living system. Where traditional polymers are stable at room temperature, SIPs undergo rapid degradation when a labile capping group is removed, allowing SIPs to offer a highly unusual degradation profile compared with traditional polymers. This review summarizes the recent efforts to leverage the unique properties of SIPs for biomedical purposes, which are categorized into sensors, drug delivery, and biotechnology. By doing so, this review aims to stimulate future studies in this rapidly growing and promising area.

Topics & Concepts

BiomedicineNanotechnologyDrug deliveryLeverage (statistics)PolymerBiosensorMaterials scienceBiochemical engineeringComputer scienceEngineeringBiologyBioinformaticsMachine learningComposite materialDendrimers and Hyperbranched PolymersPolymer Surface Interaction StudiesAdvanced Polymer Synthesis and Characterization