| Literature DB >> 21114841 |
Jin-Oh You1, Dariela Almeda, George Jc Ye, Debra T Auguste.
Abstract
For years, the field of drug delivery has focused on (1) controlling the release of a therapeutic and (2) targeting the therapeutic to a specific cell type. These research endeavors have concentrated mainly on the development of new degradable polymers and molecule-labeled drug delivery vehicles. Recent interest in biomaterials that respond to their environment have opened new methods to trigger the release of drugs and localize the therapeutic within a particular site. These novel biomaterials, usually termed "smart" or "intelligent", are able to deliver a therapeutic agent based on either environmental cues or a remote stimulus. Stimuli-responsive materials could potentially elicit a therapeutically effective dose without adverse side effects. Polymers responding to different stimuli, such as pH, light, temperature, ultrasound, magnetism, or biomolecules have been investigated as potential drug delivery vehicles. This review describes the most recent advances in "smart" drug delivery systems that respond to one or multiple stimuli.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21114841 PMCID: PMC3002303 DOI: 10.1186/1754-1611-4-15
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Eng ISSN: 1754-1611 Impact factor: 4.355
Stimuli-sensitive drug delivery.
| Stimulus | Carrier type | Payload | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| pH | PPADK | Dexamethasone | [ |
| DMAEMA/HEMA | Paclitaxel | [ | |
| PC/DAP liposomes | siRNA | [ | |
| Temperature | PNIPAm/PLGA | Paclitaxel | [ |
| MPPC/DPPC/HSPC/DSPEC-PEG-2000 | Doxorubicin | [ | |
| FA/PDMA/PNIPAm | Dipyridamole | [ | |
| Light | Cu chlorophyllin/PNIPAm | None reported | [ |
| Quinone-methide | Nile Red | [ | |
| Au/meso porous silica | Paclitaxel | [ | |
| Ultrasound | Pluronic P105/N,N-diethylacrylamide | Doxorubicin | [ |
| DPPC:DPPE-PEG2000 liposomes | Calcein | [ | |
| Glucose | poly(methacrylic acid-g-ethylene glycol) with glucose oxidase, PNIPAm with phenylboronic acid | Insulin | [ |
| PNIPAm or carboxymethyl dextran with con. A | None reported | [ | |
| Enzyme | PEG diacrylate/human neutrophil elastase-sensitive peptide | None reported | [ |
| Fibrin/β-nerve growth factor fusion proteins | β-nerve growth factor | [ | |
| sPLA2-degradable retinoid lipid pro-drug | Retinoid lipid pro-drug | [ | |
| Magnetic | Magnetite | Squalenoyl gemcitabine (SQdFdC) | [ |
| Poly[aniline- | Epirubicin | [ | |
| Polylactide/nanocrystalline magnetite | Paclitaxel | [ | |
| Egg-PC/maghemite/PAH/PSS | Calcein | [ | |
Figure 1Transmission electron microscope image of DMAEMA/HEMA nanoparticles used for drug delivery. Scale bar is 500 nm [3].
Figure 2Triggered paclitaxel release was observed by incubating 10/90 (mol/mol) DMAEMA/HEMA nanoparticles crosslinked with 3 mol% TEGDMA for 2 hours at pH 7.4 (black triangle) followed by a reduction in pH to either 6.8 (black circle), 7.0 (black square), or 7.2 (black diamond) for 4 hours. The error is the standard deviation of the mean, where n = 3 [3].
Figure 3Schematic illustration of the delivery of pH-sensitive gene carriers. For example, the DMAEMA/HEMA nanoparticle releases DNA in the low pH endosome [49].
Multiple stimuli-sensitive drug delivery.
| Stimuli | Carrier type | Payload | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Temperature/pH | PNIPAm/MAA | Vitamin B12 | [ |
| PNIPAm/AA | Isoniazid | [ | |
| PNIPAm/AAm/VP | Naltrexone | [ | |
| Light/pH or light/temperature | Polyacrylamide/Salicylideneaniline | None reported | [ |
| PSS/PAH/Au | FITC-dextran | [ | |
| Magnetic/temperature or magnetic/pH | PEO/PPO/PEO/Fe2O3 | Ibuprofen and Eosin Y | [ |
| PNIPAm/γ-Fe2O3/SiO2 | None reported | [ | |
| MPEG-b-PDEAEMA-b-PGMA, MPEG-b-PDMAEMA-b-PGMA, PDEAEMA-b-PGMA and MPEG-b-PGMA/Fe3O4 | Chlorambucil and indomethacin | [ | |