| Literature DB >> 24600516 |
Rakhi K Jha1, Pradeep K Jha1, Koel Chaudhury1, Suresh V S Rana2, Sujoy K Guha1.
Abstract
Among the various applications of nano-biotechnology, healthcare is considered one of the most significant domains. For that possibility to synthesize various kind of nanoparticles (NPs) and the ever-increasing ability to control their size as well as structure, to improve surface characteristics and binding NPs with other desired curing agents has played an important role. In this paper, a brief sketch of various kinds of nanomaterials and their biomedical applications is given. Despite claims of bio-nanotechnology about to touch all areas of medical science, information pertaining to the role of nanotechnology for the betterment of reproductive healthcare is indeed limited. Therefore, the various achievements of nano-biotechnology for healthcare in general have been illustrated while giving special insight into the role of nano-biotechnology for the future of reproductive healthcare betterment as well as current achievements of nanoscience and nanotechnology in this arena.Entities:
Keywords: fertility control; infertility; nanomaterials; nanotechnology; reproductive healthcare; reproductive organ cancer
Year: 2014 PMID: 24600516 PMCID: PMC3943174 DOI: 10.3402/nano.v5.22762
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Rev ISSN: 2000-5121
Biological nanoscales with respective natural as well as manmade things in that range
| Size range | Natural things | Synthetic things in that range |
|---|---|---|
| 5,000,000 nm | Ants | Head of a pin (2 mm), grain of salt |
| 2,00,000 nm | Duet mite | Sand grains |
| 10,000–1,00,000 nm | Human hair, pollen, cancer cell | Sheet of paper |
| 10,000–20,000 nm | Fly ash, kidney excretions | Polymeric nanoparticles |
| 1,000–10,000 nm | Cell | MEMS devices |
| 2,000–2,500 nm |
| Nanomedicine |
| 100–200 nm | Virus (T4 bacteriophage) | X-ray lens, STM tip |
| 2–20 nm | Ribosome | QDs, nanopores, nanoshells |
| 10 nm | ATP synthatase, nucleic acids (tRNA) | Computer chip, single transistor |
| 4–10 nm | Proteins (chymotrypsin), antibody, large molecules | Dendrimers, plastics |
| 1–2 nm | DNA, glucose, small molecules | Nanotubes, QDs |
| 0.1 nm | Atom, water | – |
nm, nanometer; mm, millimeter; QDs: quantum dot.
Fig. 1Trajectory of nanotechnology advancement over the years.
Examples of biocompatible nanomaterials promising for healthcare application
| S. No. | Biocompatible nanoparticles (NPs) | Respective nanomedicine | Biomedical applications | Key properties | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Metallic | |||||
| 1. | Iron oxide | Polymer nanocomposite Fe3O4–Cu–SMA–DMSO | Male and female long-term contraception | Magnetic field mediated targeted drug delivery, control of biodistribution, non-invasive imaging and reversibility | ( |
| Feridex | MRI contrast | Targets liver | ( | ||
| NanoTherm | Cancer therapy | Acts against cancerous cells | ( | ||
| Iron-Platinum alloy nanoparticles | MRI interventional catheter and guidewire | Diagnostic and therapeutic contrast agent, Semi active resonant markers for catheter and passive markers for guidewires | ( | ||
| 2. | Gold | Verigene |
| Genetic | ( |
| Nanogold or colloidal gold | Drug delivery, Biomedical imaging and diagnostics tests | Tunable optical and electronic properties | ( | ||
| Aurimmune | Cancer therapy | Acts against cancerous cells | ( | ||
| 3. | AIE-active fluorogen-loaded BSA NPs | Fluorogen, 2-(2,6-bis(( |
| Enhanced permeability and retention effect | ( |
| 4. | Nanoshell | Auroshell | Auroshell | Targets head, neck | ( |
| Semiconductor | |||||
| 5. | Quantum dots | Qdots, EviTags |
| Targets tumor cells | ( |
| 6. | Semiconductor | Nanoco, CrystalPlex, cytodiagnostics | Fluorescence contrast | Acts at molecular level on tissues | ( |
| 7. | Nanocrystals | Sensors | Contrast agent | Sensing structures | ( |
| Organic | |||||
| 8. | Cyanine dyes | Quantum dots-protein-dye conjugates |
| Tuning the degree of spectral overlap between donor and acceptor provides unique configuration | ( |
| 9. | Self-assembled chitosan (CHI) and modified lecithin (ML) | Biocompatible stable nanoparticles | Numerous application like reversible hemostatic action in wounds, drug delivery carriers | Stable over an extended pH and ionic strength range 8.7–67.2% encapsulation efficiency, ability to be converted to lyophilized powder or concentrated suspension. | ( |
| 10. | Targeted polymer nanoparticles loaded with (−)-epigallocatechin 3-gallate (EGCG) | Chemotherapeutic agent | Powerful potential to prevent prostate cancer (PCa) | Target prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) | ( |
| 11. | Organically modified silica nanoparticles | Biocompatible nanoparticles |
| Penetrate into living brains, neuronal cell bodies and axonal projections without affecting viability | ( |
| 12. | Polydopamine fluorescent organic nanoparticles | Biocompatible nanoparticles | Cell imaging | Tunable photoluminescence | ( |
| 13. | 5-Fluorouracil (5-FU) loaded biocompatible fluorescent zein nanoparticles | Solid lipid nanoparticles | For simultaneous bioimaging and drug delivery application | Better controlled release kinetics, improved stability, enhanced drug entrapment | ( |
| 14. | Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory (NSAIDs)-loaded nanoparticles | Biocompatible drug loaded nanoparticles | Models to be further integrated in a prosthesis surface functionalization | Controlled drug release | ( |
| 15. | Polymeric nanoparticles (NPs) | Biocompatible NPs with therapeutic effect | Potential co-delivery of therapeutic agents | Controlled drug delivery, acid degradable | ( |
| 16. | Polymeric NPs releasing cargo | Therapeutic multifunctional nanoparticles | Drug targeting, controlled release of therapeutic and diagnostic agents | Degrade and release cargo in response to biologically relevant levels of hydrogen peroxide | ( |
Fig. 2(A) Unilamellar liposomes (Courtesy en.wikipedia.org) (37). (B) Schematic illustrations of carbon nanotube structures of various kind: i. armchair, ii. zigzag, and iii. chiral SWNTs (8). (C) SEM image of gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) with an average size of 189 nm. Reproduced with permission from Zhang et al. 2014 (51).
Fig. 3(A) EDS-X-ray microanalysis of the Fe3O4–Cu–SMA–DMSO (Smart RISUG) indicating arrangement of drug particles in the Cuproferrogel compound. (B) HRTEM of 50–150×10−9 m sized Smart RISUG nanoparticles. (C) Schematic representation of Fe3O4–Cu nanoparticles surrounded by SMA polymer, and its use as a contraceptive.
Fig. 4Qualitative FISH detection of HER2 gene-amplified SK-BR3 breast cancer cells with (A) Streptavidin conjugated Qdot 605 and (B) fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC), respectively. Reproduced from Valizadeh et al., 2012 (83).
Fig. 5(A) Schematic presentation of the encapsulation of anticancer drugs methotraxate (left) and 5-fluorouracil (right) into PEGylated generation 3 and 4 PAMAM dendrimers and (B) schematic presentation of dendrimers as nano-scaffold for the attachment of cell-specific ligands, modifiers, and fluorescence tags. Reproduced from Svenson and Tomalia, 2012 (104).
Fig. 6A diagram depicting major possible roles of nano-biotechnology in reproductive healthcare.