| Literature DB >> 29882898 |
Vivek K Bajpai1, Shruti Shukla2, Sung-Min Kang3, Seung Kyu Hwang4, Xinjie Song5, Yun Suk Huh6, Young-Kyu Han7.
Abstract
Current trends in the application of nanomaterials are emerging in the nano-biotechnological sector for development of medicines. Cyanobacteria (blue-green algae) are photosynthetic prokaryotes that have applications to human health and numerous biological activities as dietary supplements. Cyanobacteria produce biologically active and chemically diverse compounds such as cyclic peptides, lipopeptides, fatty acid amides, alkaloids, and saccharides. More than 50% of marine cyanobacteria are potentially exploitable for the extraction of bioactive substances, which are effective in killing cancer cells by inducing apoptotic death. The current review emphasizes that not even 10% of microalgal bioactive components have reached commercialized platforms due to difficulties related to solubility. Considering these factors, they should be considered as a potential source of natural products for drug discovery and drug delivery approaches. Nanoformulations employing a wide variety of nanoparticles and their polymerized forms could be an emerging approach to the development of new cancer drugs. This review highlights recent research on microalgae-based medicines or compounds as well as their biomedical applications. This review further discusses the facts, limitations, and commercial market trends related to the use of microalgae for industrial and medicinal purposes.Entities:
Keywords: commercial drawbacks; drug development; microalgae/cyanobacteria; nanoformulation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29882898 PMCID: PMC6024944 DOI: 10.3390/md16060179
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mar Drugs ISSN: 1660-3397 Impact factor: 5.118
Figure 1Overview of regulative parameters of nanoparticles use (biomaterials, metal and metal-oxides, carbon-based) for devising an optimized nanoformulation for clinical drug applications.
Figure 2The advantages of using nanoparticles for delivering microalgal anticancer agents. (a) improved solubility of anticancer agents; (b) enhanced circulation time of anticancer agents in the blood vessels; (c) facilitation of the accumulation of anticancer agents in targeted tumor tissues; (d) targeting features of nanoparticles allow drug uptake by tumor cells through endocytosis, resulting in increased intracellular drug concentrations; (e) achieve controlled and stable drug release; and (f) minimization of efflux pump-mediated drug-resistance since nanoparticles are not substrates for ATP-binding cassette proteins.
Figure 3List of selected anticancer compounds derived from cyanobacteria or microalgae for effective nanoformulation.
Figure 4Possible molecular mechanism of microalgal drug loaded nanoformulation in cancer therapy via mitochondrial-induced apoptotic pathway. (a) Attachment od microalgal drug loaded nanoformulation to cell membrane; (b) activation of p53 protein pathway; (c) activation of apoptotic proteins; (d) mitochondrial membrane leakage; (e) release of Cyt-C proteins; (f) activation of CaSpase3; (g) cleavage of nucleus membrane; (h) fragmentation of DNA strands; (i) upregulation of apoptosis inducer genes; (j) downregulation of anti-apoptotic gene; and (k) cell zeiosis (blebbing).
Major commercialized and development phase of marine-based anti-cancer compounds/drugs.
| Natural Compounds/Drugs | Source | Company Launched | Status after 2015 Food and Drug Administration (FDA)/European Medicines Evaluation Agency (EMEA) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Brentuximab vedotin 63 (Adcetris™) | Cyanobacteria: | Seattle Genetics (Bothell, WA, USA) | In market with antibody-drug conjugates |
| Glembatumumab vedotin | Cyanobacterium: | Celldex Therapeutics | Phase II |
| DMMC (Cyclic depsipeptide) | Cyanobacterium: | - | Preclinical |
| Largazole | Cyanobacterium: | - | Preclinical |
| Apratoxin A | Cyanobacterium: | - | Preclinical |
| Cryptophycin 1 | Cyanobacterium: | Merck Pvt. | In market |
| Tasipeptins A–B | Cyanobacterium: | - | Preclinical |
| Coibamide A | Cyanobacterium: | - | Preclinical |
Nanoformulations from marine resources for anti-cancer therapies.
| Marine Resources | Name of the Species | Nanoparticles/Size (nm) | Activity | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Seagrass | Ag/5–25 | Anticancer | [ | |
| Ag/17–29 | Anticancer and cytotoxicity | [ | ||
| Salt marshes | Ag/30–31 | Anticancer | [ | |
| Sand dune | Ag/85–100 | Anticancer | [ | |
| Marine fungi | Ag/20–60 | Anticancer | [ | |
| Marine mussel | Cadmium-based quantum dots/6–10 | Immunocytotoxicity, cytogenotoxicity and genotoxicity | [ | |
| Marine cocktail | Marine poly unsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) | Lipid nanoparticles/100–200 | Anticancer | [ |
Figure 5Marine originated polysaccharides and their applications in cancer therapies in combination with nanobiotechnology. NP: Nanoparticle.
Figure 6Overall concept for scale-up microalgal nanoformulations; the way to a commercialized platform for oral and intravenous drug delivery in anticancer drug developments.