| Literature DB >> 30037052 |
Nemany A N Hanafy1,2, Maged El-Kemary3, Stefano Leporatti4.
Abstract
Micelles as colloidal suspension have attracted considerable attention due to their potential use for both cancer diagnosis and therapy. These structures have proven their ability to deliver poorly water-soluble anticancer drugs, improve drug stability, and have good penetration and site-specificity, leading to enhance therapeutic efficacy. Micelles are composed of hydrophobic and hydrophilic components assembled into nanosized spherical, ellipsoid, cylindrical, or unilamellar structures. For their simple formation, they are widely studied, either by using opposite polymers attachment consisting of two or more block copolymers, or by using fatty acid molecules that can modify themselves in a rounded shape. Recently, hybrid and responsive stimuli nanomicelles are formed either by integration with metal nanoparticles such as silver, gold, iron oxide nanoparticles inside micelles or by a combination of lipids and polymers into single composite. Herein, through this special issue, an updated overview of micelles development and their application for cancer therapy will be discussed.Entities:
Keywords: cancer therapy; hybrid polymeric and stimuli-responsive nanomicelles; micelles
Year: 2018 PMID: 30037052 PMCID: PMC6071246 DOI: 10.3390/cancers10070238
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Scheme 1Assembled micelles structure.
Scheme 2Polymer micelle structures.
Scheme 3Hybrid polymer lipid protein nanocarrier. Step 1: Assembly of chitosan and oleic acid; step 2: Folic acid (FA) conjugation with bovine serum albumin; and step 3: functionalization of chitosan grafted oleic acid surface by using bovine serum albumin (BSA)-FA (Figure adapted with permission from ref. [53]).
Scheme 4General scheme for the formation of the hybrid compound micelles.
Micelles modification summary.
| Micelles | Formulation |
|---|---|
| Lipid micelle | Phospholipid or cholesterol |
| Polymeric micelles | Polymers having hydrophobic and hydrophilic properties |
| Hybrid polymeric lipids micelles | Polymers integrated into lipids |
| Hybrid micelles with metal nanoparticles | Micelles assembled with gold, silver or iron oxide nanoparticles |
| Micelles coated by layer by layer technique | Micelles incorporated into calcium carbonate and coated by polymers |
| Stimuli-responsive micelles | Micelles doped with stimuli such as pH-sensitive components |
Micelles as carriers for cancer therapies (reproduced from ref [81]) with permission, (Copyright Elsevier 2014).
| Name | Drug | Block Copolymer | Drug Loading (%w Drug/w Polymer) | Size (nm) | Company | Indication |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NK105 | Paclitaxel | PEG- | 23 | 85 | Nippon Kayaku, Co. | Gastric cancer/Breast cancer |
| NK012 | SN-38 | PEG- | 20 | 20 | Nippon Kayaku, Co. | Triple negative breast cancer |
| NK911 | Doxorubicin | PEG- | 17 | 40 | Nippon Kayaku, Co. | Various solid tumors |
| NC-6004 | Cisplatin | PEG- | 30 | 20 | Nanocarrier, Co. | Pancreatic cancer |
| NC-4016 | Oxaliplatin | PEG- | 30 | 30 | Nanocarrier, Co. | Various solid tumors |
| NC-6300 | Epirubicin | PEG- | 20 | 60 | Nanocarrier, Co. | Various solid tumors |
| siRNA micelles | siRNA | PEG- | Various | 40–60 | Nanocarrier, Co. | – |