Litcius/Paper detail

Enzyme-Responsive Nanoparticles for Anti-tumor Drug Delivery

Mengqian Li, Guangkuo Zhao, Weike Su, Qi Shuai

2020Frontiers in Chemistry225 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The past few decades have seen great progress in the exploration of nanoparticles (NPs) as novel tools for cancer treatments and diagnosis. Practical and reliable application of nanoparticle-based technology in clinical transformation remains nevertheless an ongoing challenge. The design, preparation, and evaluation of various smart NPs with specific physicochemical responses in tumor-related physiological conditions have been of great interests in both academic and clinical research. Of particular, smart enzyme-responsive nanoparticles can predictively and selectively react with specific enzymes expressed in tumor tissues, leading to targeted delivery of anti-tumor drugs, reduced systemic toxicity, and improved therapeutic effect. In addition, NPs interact with internal enzymes usually under mild conditions (low temperature, aqueous media, neutral or close to neutral pH) with high efficiency. In this review, recent advances in the past 5 years in enzyme-responsive nanoparticles for anti-tumor drug delivery are summarized and discussed. The following contents are divided based on the different action sites of enzymes toward NPs, notably hydrophobic core, cleavable/uncleavable linker, hydrophilic crown, and targeting ligand. Enzyme-engaged destruction of any component of these delicate nanoparticle structures could result in either targeting drug delivery or controlled drug release.

Topics & Concepts

NanoparticleDrug deliveryEnzymeChemistryNanotechnologyDrugTargeted drug deliveryLinkerBiophysicsBiochemistryPharmacologyMaterials scienceMedicineComputer scienceBiologyOperating systemNanoparticle-Based Drug DeliveryGraphene and Nanomaterials ApplicationsRNA Interference and Gene Delivery