| Literature DB >> 27690060 |
Michail Karavolos1, Alina Holban2,3.
Abstract
The new age of nanotechnology has signaled a stream of entrepreneurial possibilities in various areas, form industry to medicine. Drug delivery has benefited the most by introducing nanostructured systems in the transport and controlled release of therapeutic molecules at targeted sites associated with a particular disease. As many nanosized particles reach the gastrointestinal tract by various means, their interactions with the molecular components of this highly active niche are intensively investigated. The well-characterized antimicrobial activities of numerous nanoparticles are currently being considered as a reliable and efficient alternative to the eminent world crisis in antimicrobial drug discovery. The interactions of nanosystems present in the gastrointestinal route with host microbiota is unavoidable; hence, a major research initiative is needed to explore the mechanisms and effects of these nanomaterials on microbiota and the impact that microbiota may have in the outcome of therapies entailing drug delivery nanosystems through the gastrointestinal route. These coordinated studies will provide novel techniques to replace or act synergistically with current technologies and help develop new treatments for major diseases via the discovery of unique antimicrobial molecules.Entities:
Keywords: antimicrobial; gastrointestinal delivery; infection; microbiota; nanotechnology; pathogen
Year: 2016 PMID: 27690060 PMCID: PMC5198037 DOI: 10.3390/ph9040062
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceuticals (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8247
Figure 1The intimate interactions between microbiome and nanomaterials. The complex biological signalling exchanges unfolding regularly during the encounters of drug-transporting nanoparticles and microbiota influence microbiome composition and, hence, the balance between health and disease (dysbiosis).