| Literature DB >> 29464123 |
Sheikh Tasnim Jahan1, Sams M A Sadat1, Matthew Walliser1, Azita Haddadi1.
Abstract
In nanomedicine, targeted therapeutic nanoparticle (NP) is a virtual outcome of nanotechnology taking the advantage of cancer propagation pattern. Tying up all elements such as therapeutic or imaging agent, targeting ligand, and cross-linking agent with the NPs is the key concept to deliver the payload selectively where it intends to reach. The microenvironment of tumor tissues in lymphatic vessels can also help targeted NPs to achieve their anticipated accumulation depending on the formulation objectives. This review accumulates the application of poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) and polyethylene glycol (PEG) based NP systems, with a specific perspective in cancer. Nowadays, PLGA, PEG, or their combinations are the mostly used polymers to serve the purpose of targeted therapeutic NPs. Their unique physicochemical properties along with their biological activities are also discussed. Depending on the biological effects from parameters associated with existing NPs, several advantages and limitations have been explored in teaming up all the essential facts to give birth to targeted therapeutic NPs. Therefore, the current article will provide a comprehensive review of various approaches to fabricate a targeted system to achieve appropriate physicochemical properties. Based on such findings, researchers can realize the benefits and challenges for the next generation of delivery systems.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29464123 PMCID: PMC5804325 DOI: 10.1155/2017/9090325
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Drug Deliv ISSN: 2090-3022
Figure 1Schematic representation of passive and active targeting approaches. The diagram includes different types of ligands that can be conjugated with NPs for active targeting. EPR, enhanced permeability and retention; NP, nanoparticle; PEG, polyethylene glycol.
A brief overview and purposes of various actively targeted delivery systems using PLGA and PEG to their suitable targets.
| Target cells/diseases/animal models | Targets | Targeted delivery system | Purpose of the study | Reference |
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| Leukemia (K562 cells) | Transferrin | Daunorubicin loaded PLGA-polylysine-PEG-transferrin | (i) To assess the antitumor efficacy of the delivery system with or without Daunorubicin/transferrin | [ |
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| Brain capillary endothelial cells (BCEC) and astrocytes | Transferrin | PLGA NPs coated with bovine serum albumin/transferrin | (i) Evaluation of possible endocytosis mechanism for transferrin targeted brain drug delivery | [ |
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| Swiss albino mouse (female or male) | Transferrin | Lamotrigine loaded PLGA NPs | (i) Surface functionalization of NPs using transferrin and lactoferrin as ligand to deliver Lamotrigine to brain | [ |
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| Pancreatic cancer cells | Transferrin | Bortezomib loaded PLGA NPs | (i) To study the targeting efficiency and capacity of transferrin targeted NPs | [ |
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| Breast cancer and glial cells | Transferrin | Curcumin/5-fluorouracil loaded magnetic PLGA NPs | (i) To identify the mechanism of cell death by the dual drug transferrin targeted NPs | [ |
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| Brain glioma cells | Transferrin | Paclitaxel and Doxorubicin loaded magnetic silica PLGA NPs | (i) To determine the transport efficiency through blood-brain barrier and target glioma cancer cells | [ |
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| Human fibrosarcoma cell line (HT-1080) and human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) | Aminopeptidase N (CD13) | Docetaxel loaded PLGA-PEG diblock copolymer NPs | (i) Exploration of the targeting potential of the drug loaded PEG-PLGA NPs | [ |
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| A549 lung epithelial cells | Intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1) | Modified Pluronic® surfactant on PLGA NPs | (i) To find how NPs are targeted to lung epithelial cells via ICAM-1 to be internalized | [ |
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| Choroidal neovascularization (CNV) induced rat | Integrin/Transferrin | Antivascular endothelial growth factor intraceptor, Flt23K loaded PLGA-RGD/transferrin and/or PLGA-RGD-transferrin NPs | (i) To apply the targeted delivery of peptide modified PLGA NPs for the management of CNV, the cause of blindness due to macular degeneration | [ |
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| Human pancreatic cancer and human glioblastoma | Integrin | c-RGD-modified micelle-type PLGA-4-arm PEG | (i) To prove the use of multi-branched PLGA micelle as a diagnostic probe for pancreatic tumor detection | [ |
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| HUVEC cells | Integrin | Paclitaxel loaded PLGA-PEG NP or PEG-PCL (polycaprolactone) NP | (i) To investigate the effect of RGD peptide to target tumor endothelium and to see the antitumor efficacy of Paclitaxel | [ |
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| Glioblastoma multiforme | Folate/lactoferritin | Folic acid or lactoferritin modified Etoposide encapsulated PLGA NPs | (i) Assessment of anti-tumor efficacy of Etoposide when encapsulated in the ligand-PLGA conjugate | [ |
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| Human epidermal carcinoma cells | Folate | PLGA-folate and PLGA-RGD | (i) To confirm that surface modified NPs showed effective cellular uptake with no cytotoxicity | [ |
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| Human breast cancer cells (MCF-7) | Folate | Vincristine sulphate loaded PLGA-PEG-folate NPs or PLGA-PEG-cell penetrating peptide R7 | (i) To investigate the cell uptake capacity of the ligand-drug-PLGA conjugate and ligand-PLGA conjugate | [ |
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| Colorectal cancer | Folate | Folate modified Capecitabine loaded PLGA-PEG NPs and flate-PLGA-PEG NPs | (i) To prepare the two blends of NPs to evaluate their control release properties | [ |
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| Cervical tumor cells and human ovarian cancer cells | Folate | Folate modified Quercetin loaded PLGA-PEG NPs | (i) To test the cytotoxicity profile, targeting effect and cell uptake properties of the folate expressing cancer cells | [ |
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| SKBR-3 breast cancer cell | HER2 | Anti-HER 2 trastuzumab antibody -modified Docetaxel-loaded PLGA | (i) To point out the feasibility of ligand conjugation strategy and demonstrate its efficiency in cell uptake and cytotoxicity | [ |
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| MCF-7 breast cancer cell | HER2 | Anti-HER 2 trastuzumab antibody -modified human serum albumin NPs or gelatin NPs | (i) To observe the specific targeting of Herceptin conjugated NPs to Her2 overexpressed cells | [ |
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| Melanoma hepatocellular carcinoma and breast cancer cell | SM5-1 binding protein | Paclitaxel loaded PLGA linked with SM5-1 single chain antibody (scFv) derived from SM5-1 monoclonal antibody | (i) To develop the targeted NP system and examine their specific binding, cross-reactivity and internalization | [ |
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| Metastatic lesion of human prostatic adenocarcinoma | Androgen receptor (AR) and | PSMA antibody conjugated PLGA-Curcumin NPs | (i) To generate an antibody conjugated targeted NP to target Ar/ | [ |
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| PSMA positive prostate cancer cell | PSMA positive cell surface | PLGA-PEG copolymer derived microbubble (MB) conjugated with urea based PSMA inhibitor molecular probe | (i) To establish the MB-molecular probe conjugate and confirm their selective binding to PSMA positive cells | [ |
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| PSMA on the surface of prostate cancer cell | PSMA | PLGA-PEG-Aptamer A10 triblock NPs | (i) To determine the optimum surface density of aptamer on the NP surface for maximum uptake by prostate cancer cell both | [ |
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| Dendritic cell | Mannose receptor | Mannan-decorated PLGA NPs | (i) To incorporate mannose by covalent conjugation and adsorption method, compare the methods based on uptake of NPs by cells | [ |
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| Lung epithelium adenocarcinoma and human pulmonary microvascular endothelial cells | Hyaluronic acid (HA) receptor for HA NPs, for other systems it is not elucidated | Glycosaminoglycan such as heparin, HA, chondroitin sulfate and dermatan sulfate modified PLGA NPs | (i) Evaluation of the toxicity profile of the NP systems | [ |
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| Breast cancer cell (MCF-7) | Cell nucleus | Doxorubicin loaded NLS-conjugated PLGA NPs | (i) To increase the concentration of Doxorubicin in cell nucleus via NLS targeted NPs | [ |
Figure 2Schematic representation of ligand modified PLGA NPs by (a). Physical adsorption method and (b). Chemical conjugation methods, (1) carboxylic acid functionalized NPs form NHS-ester in presence of EDC and sulfo-NHS. NHS-ester reacts with primary amines to yield a stable amide bond, (2), (3), and (4). Thiol-maleimide reaction: activation of amine groups on NPs by SPDP and DTT followed by introduction of thiol groups that react with maleimide groups on the ligand, activation of carboxylic acid groups by EDC followed by introduction of thiol groups that react with maleimide groups on the ligand and maleimide coupling with activated thiol groups. (5) Noncovalent binding of biotin linked NP with ligand linked Streptavidin.
An overview of different targeting ligand decorated PLGA NPs with their preparation methods, ligands used, payloads, size, and zeta potential.
| NPs type | NP preparation method | Targeting ligand | Loaded Materials | Stabilizer | Cell line/animal model | Average size | Zeta potential | Reference |
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| PEG | Top-down strategic PRINT technique | Transferrin | — | — | HeLa, Ramos, H460, SK-OV-3, HepG2, LNCaP | (267 ± 49)–(292 ± 76) | (−35.6 ± 1.3)–(39.9 ± 1.7) | [ |
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| PEG-PCL | Dry-down method | Alexa Fluor 647 (AF647) | — | — | MDA-MB-468, MCF-7 | (26.4 ± 0.7)–(60.9 ± 0.7) | (−5.1)–(−7.3) | [ |
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| PEG-PCL | Solvent evaporation | Angiopep-2 | Paclitaxel | Sodium Cholate | U87 MG, BCECs | <100 | (−3.08 ± 0.94)–(−3.28 ± 0.75) | [ |
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| PLGA | Nanoprecipitation | g7 Peptide | Loperamide, Rhodamine-123 | Poloxamer 188 | Tail vein in rats | 140–180 | −20 | [ |
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| PLGA | Modified solvent extraction/evaporation | Trastuzumab | Paclitaxel | PVA | Caco-2, SK-BR-3 | (293.8 ± 5.7)–(312.3 ± 8.2) | (−35.07 ± 1.68)–(−21.24 ± 2.11) | [ |
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| PLGA | Emulsion-solvent evaporation/extraction | Humanized anti-DC-SIGN (hD1) | FITC-TT peptide, DQ-BSA | PVA | Granulocytes, PBMCs | 202 ± 4, 239 ± 14 | (−28.6 ± 0.4), (−44.9 ± 1.8) | [ |
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| PLGA-PEG | Nanoprecipitation | A10 PSMA aptamer | Cisplatin | — | LNCaP, PC3 | (131 ± 0.5)–(172 ± 3.4) | — | [ |
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| PLGA-PEG | Emulsion-solvent evaporation | Pep TGN | Coumarin-6 | — | bEnd.3 | (104.17 ± 3.45)–(121.46 ± 0.76) | (−24.43 ± 0.22)–(−18.25 ± 0.88) | [ |
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| PLGA-PEG | Solvent-diffusion | cRGD peptide | Doxorubicin | PEMA | MDA-MB-231, B16F10, MCF-7 | (366.6 ± 3.1)–(423.0 ± 16.6) | (−18.9 ± 2.4)–(−51.7 ± 3.1) | [ |
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| PLGA-PEG | Nanoprecipitation | A10 2′-fluoropyrimidine RNA aptamers | Docetaxel | — | LNCaP | (153.3 ± 13.9) | −42 ± 1 | [ |
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| PLGA–PEG | Emulsion-solvent diffusion | Folate binding protein | Docetaxel | PVA | SKOV3 | (120 ± 5)–(216 ± 18) | (−6.27 ± 0.95)–(−12.2 ± 0.6) | [ |
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| PLGA-TPGS | Solvent extraction/evaporation | TPGS | Docetaxel | TPGS | Caco-2, MCF-7 | (219.42 ± 5.24)–(253.51 ± 5.38) | (−21.87 ± 2.11)–(34.1 ± 4.28) | [ |
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| PLGA-TPGS | Solvent extraction/evaporation | Vitamin E TPGS-folate (TPGS-FOL) | Doxorubicin | — | MCF-7, C6 glioma | (324 ± 5)–(359 ± 10) | — | [ |
Some examples of polysaccharide decorated PLGA NPs with their preparation methods, payloads, antibody conjugation methods, size, and zeta potential.
| Shell and Core | Cargo/label | NP preparation method | Conjugation technique | Average size (nm) | Zeta potential (mV) | Reference |
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| Chitosan/PEG functionalized PLGA core | Fluoresceinamine (FA) | O/W emulsification solvent evaporation | Covalent conjugation | 329 (FA-chitosan-PLGA) | 19.7 (FA-chitosan-PLGA) | [ |
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| Chitosan-PLGA engineered into mesenchymal stem cell | Paclitaxel, Curcumin | O/W emulsification solvent evaporation | Chemical conjugation | 142 | 9.22 | [ |
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| Heparin/chitosan-Pluronic on PEG-PLGA core | Tetramethyl | Nanoprecipitation/solvent diffusion | Chemical conjugation | 144 (Hep-PLGA), | −50 (Hep-PLGA), +38 (Ch-PLGA) | [ |
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| Chitosan coated on PLGA | siRNA | Double emulsification solvent evaporation | Surface adsorption | 263.73 | 33.76 | [ |
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| Lecithin/chitosan on PLGA core | Betamethasone-17-valerate (BSV) | Emulsion-diffusion evaporation | Ionic gelation | 280.9 (BSV-chitosan-PLGA) | −5.62 (BSV-chitosan-PLGA) | [ |
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| 6-Carboxyfluorescein-chitosan film on paclitaxel-PLGA core | siRNA | O/W emulsification solvent evaporation | Surface adsorption as film | 204–543 | +16.9–31.2 | [ |
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| Dextran-cholesterol on PLA core | 99mTc | Co-dialysis | Covalent attachment | 119–201 | — | [ |
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| Dextran-cholesterol on PLA core | Fluorescein isothiocyanate | O/W emulsification solvent evaporation | Covalent attachment | 105 | −11.9 | [ |
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| Dextran-cholesterol-aldehyde on PLA core | Transferrin, fluorescein isothiocyanate | Co-dialysis method | Covalent attachment | 100–150 | −2.8 | [ |
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| Alginate-chitosan on PLGA core | Folic acid or Folic acid-PEG | Emulsion solvent evaporation | Covalent attachment | — | — | [ |
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| Dextran-sulphate sodium and PLGA core | Vincristine sulphate | Nanoprecipitation | Self-assembly | 128.3–133.0 | (−10.6)–(−13.8) | [ |
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| Trimethylated chitosan- on PLGA core | Coenzyme Q10 and Coumarin-6 | Nanoprecipitation | Covalent attachment | 136.8–146.7 | 17.7–21 | [ |
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| Chitosan-4-thiobutylamidine on PLGA core | Curcumin | Emulsification solvent evaporation | Covalent attachment | 889.5 | 24.75 | [ |
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| Chitosan on PLGA core | Mitoxantrone | Emulsion solvent evaporation | Adsorption and covalent attachment | 291 (adsorption) | 25.13 (adsorption), | [ |
Some examples of PEG-modified PLGA NPs with preparation methods, targeting ligands, size, zeta potential, and applications.
| Polymer | Targeting ligand | Conjugation method | Average size | Zeta potential | Applications | Reference |
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| PEGylated PLGA | A10 aptamer | Covalent conjugation | 188 | N/A | Targeting human xenograft prostate cancer in mice | [ |
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| PLGA-PEG | — | Covalent conjugation | 170 | N/A | NPs encapsulating endostar slowed growth of tumor xenografts | [ |
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| PEGylated PLGA | cLABL | Covalent conjugation | 244 | −23.3 | Targeting the vascular endothelium with upregulated ICAM-1 | [ |
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| 50/50 PLGA and Palmitate-Avidin | Biotinylated PEG, and horseradish peroxidase | Streptavidin-biotin noncovalent binding | 170 | −11.3 | Diffusion of PEGylated particles cervical mucus was 3–10x higher than unmodified PLGA | [ |
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| PLGA-PEG | — | Covalent conjugation | 148 | 1.84 | Sustained release of 9-nitrocamptothecin | [ |
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| PLGA-PEG | Covalent conjugation | 65–100 | N/A | Sustained release of adriamycin | [ | |
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| PLA-PEG | Covalent conjugation | 952 | Neutral | Reduced opsonization of NPs | [ | |
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| PLGA and PEG-distearyl | Coemulsification | 20–40 | −19.2 | Higher Doxorubicin encapsulation efficiency, slower release rate, and rapid cellular uptake | [ | |
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| PLGA-mPEG | Covalent conjugation | N/A | N/A | Reduction in protein adsorption on the surface films of PLGA-PEG (750 and 2000) compared to adsorption onto PLGA only | [ | |
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| PLGA | PEG/poloxamer 407 | Coincorporation or surface adsorption | 189–225 | (−16.1)–(−20.3) | Increased blood circulation half-life of NPs | [ |
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| PLGA-PEG di-block (15% PEG with 5 kDa) | Covalent conjugation | 114 | −2.8 | Higher cellular uptake of formulations containing 15% of PEG compared to 5% and 10% PEG-PLGA formulations | [ | |