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Amino Acid Functionalized Inorganic Nanoparticles as Cutting-Edge Therapeutic and Diagnostic Agents

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 08:37 authored by Amlan Chakraborty, Jennifer Boer, Cordelia Selomulya, Magdalena PlebanskiMagdalena Plebanski
The field of medical diagnostics and therapeutics is being revolutionized by nanotechnology, from targeted drug delivery to cancer immunotherapy. Inorganic nano particles are widely used, albeit problems with agglutination, cytotoxicity, free radical generation, and instability in some biological environments limits their utility. Conjugation of biomolecules such as peptides to the surface of nanoparticles can mitigate such problems, as well as confer specialized theranostic (therapeutic and/or diagnostic) properties, useful across biomedical applications such as vaccines, drug delivery, and in vivo imaging. Coating with amino acids, rather than peptides, offers further a highly cost-effective approach (due to their ease of purification and availability), but is currently an underutilized way to decrease toxicity and enhance stability. Amino acid molecules are small (< 200 Da) and have both positive and negative charge groups (zwitterionic) facilitating charge-specific molecule binding. Additionally, amino acids exert by themselves some useful biological functions, with antibacterial and viability enhancing properties (for eukaryotic cells). Overall particle size, nanoparticle core, and the specific amino acid used to functionalize their surface influence their biodistribution, and their effects on host immunity. In this review, we provide for the first time an overview of this emerging field, and identify gaps in knowledge for future research.

Funding

Immune-imprinting nanoparticles (iNPs)

Australian Research Council

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History

Related Materials

  1. 1.
    DOI - Is published in 10.1021/acs.bioconjchem.7b00455
  2. 2.
    ISSN - Is published in 10431802

Journal

Bioconjugate Chemistry

Volume

29

Issue

3

Start page

657

End page

671

Total pages

15

Publisher

American Chemical Society

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© 2017 American Chemical Society

Former Identifier

2006086169

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2018-12-10