| Literature DB >> 30987129 |
S M Shatil Shahriar1, Jagannath Mondal2, Mohammad Nazmul Hasan3, Vishnu Revuri4, Dong Yun Lee5, Yong-Kyu Lee6,7.
Abstract
The limitations of conventional therapeutic drugs necessitate the importance of developing novel therapeutics to treat diverse diseases. Conventional drugs have poor blood circulation time and are not stable or compatible with the biological system. Nanomaterials, with their exceptional structural properties, have gained significance as promising materials for the development of novel therapeutics. Nanofibers with unique physiochemical and biological properties have gained significant attention in the field of health care and biomedical research. The choice of a wide variety of materials for nanofiber fabrication, along with the release of therapeutic payload in sustained and controlled release patterns, make nanofibers an ideal material for drug delivery research. Electrospinning is the conventional method for fabricating nanofibers with different morphologies and is often used for the mass production of nanofibers. This review highlights the recent advancements in the use of nanofibers for the delivery of therapeutic drugs, nucleic acids and growth factors. A detailed mechanism for fabricating different types of nanofiber produced from electrospinning, and factors influencing nanofiber generation, are discussed. The insights from this review can provide a thorough understanding of the precise selection of materials used for fabricating nanofibers for specific therapeutic applications and also the importance of nanofibers for drug delivery applications.Entities:
Keywords: biomedical applications; electrospinning; fabrication; nanofibers; therapeutics
Year: 2019 PMID: 30987129 PMCID: PMC6523943 DOI: 10.3390/nano9040532
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanomaterials (Basel) ISSN: 2079-4991 Impact factor: 5.076
Figure 1Schematic representation of a traditional electrospinning process and various healthcare and biomedical applications of nanofibers.
Figure 2Types of electrospinning, different therapeutics-loaded nanofibers and their route of administrations.
Figure 3(a) The cytotoxicity effects of anticancer drug-loaded electrospun nanofibers targeting various deadly cancers. (Here, the numerical numbers 1, 2, 3, and 4 on the diagram represent the usages of nanofibers in lung, liver, gastric and colon cancer respectively.); (b) tumor dimension after treating with indicated patches (DXM-PLA); (c) quantitative tumor volume of mice treated with indicated scaffold/film/drug/control; (d) change of body weight of mice as a function of time upon treatment with indicated patch (Figure 3b–d reproduced from ref. [65] with permission from ACS Publication, 2019).
Figure 4Drug loading strategies to nanofibers: (a) basic antibacterial delivery systems, (b) advanced antibacterial delivery systems (core–shell structure, nanoparticle decorated and multidrug loaded), and (c) smart delivery systems (stimuli responsive). (Reproduced from ref no [76] with permission from “Taylor and Francis Group”, Ref: AF/IEDC/P19/0117).
Figure 5(a) An illustrative diagram of nanofiber-based ophthalmic drug delivery system; (b) Ocular deposition of dendrimer nanofibers (DNF). Brown Norway rats (BNR) (n = 3) received a DNF-FITC mat topically in the right eye (experimental eye), whereas the left eye received no treatment (contralateral eye); (c) In vivo single dose response. BNR (n = 4) received a single dose of brimonidine tartrate (BT) topically via saline eye drops or DNF; (d) In vivo 3-week daily dose response. Brown Norway rats (n = 4) received a daily dose of BT via saline eye drops or DNF for 3 weeks. (Here in, Figure 5b–d reproduced from ref. [58] with permission from ACS Publication, 2017).
Electrospun nanofiber-based DNA/RNA delivery.
| Design Strategy | Therapeutics | Polymer | Facilities | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Core-Shell | pDNA (pCMVb encoding β-galactosidase) | PLA-PEG-PLA, PLGA | Prevent DNA degradation. Protect the bioactivity of DNA during electrospinning. Controlled and sustained release of DNA. High Transfection efficiency. | [ |
| pDNA encoding pCMV-EGFP | PEI-HA, PEG, PECL | Extended-release properties (>120 d). High transfection efficiency. Controllable release kinetics. High Expression of EGFP. | [ | |
| AV encoding-gene for GFP | PECL, PEG | Controlled and porogen-assisted release behavior. High and localized transgene expression. Very low proliferation rate. Controlled virus exposure. The lower level of IL-1β, TNF-α, and IFN-α. | [ | |
| pDNA (pEGFP-N2 encoding-GFP) | PELA | Sustained the controlled release. High Transfection efficiency. Promising cell viability. Highly controlled spatiotemporal gene expression. Promote tissue regeneration. | [ | |
| pDNA (pbFGF and pVEGF) | PELA, PEI | Sustain release properties (>28 d). Enhance cell attachment, viability and protein expression. Higher cellular transfection. Ensure extracellular secretion of collagen IV and laminin. Downregulate inflammation. Produce microvessels and mature blood vessels. | [ | |
| Circular pDNAs; [pcDNA3.1/myc-His− (A), and pcDNA3.1/myc-His(−)/lacZ] | PEG-b-P4VP | Offers tetrasome like pathway for DNA delivery. Ensure highly controllable kinetics. | [ | |
| Coating, Encapsulation, Incorporation, or Interfacing | pDNA (PT7T3D-PacI containing BMP-2 | PLGA/Hap, Chitosan | Stable bioactivity of BMP-2 plasmid. Enhance Cell attachment ability. Low toxicity and immunological effects. Controlled release profile and bone regeneration capability. High DNA transfection efficiency. | [ |
| AAV r3.45 (cDNA encoding-GFP/CMVP) | ELP, PECL | Highly efficient cellular transduction. Influencing cell viability. Temperature-sensitive release properties. | [ | |
| GAPDH siRNA | PCL, PEG | Control release of siRNA (>28 d). High cellular transfection. Up to 81% of GAPDH gene silencing efficiency. Local delivery of siRNA. Low toxicity. Tissue regeneration. | [ | |
| Silencer® GAPDH siRNA | PCLEEP with transfection reagent | Sustained the controlled release of siRNA (>28 d). More than 97% release kinetics profile. Prominently induced the desired gene silencing. | [ | |
| EGFP-specific siRNA duplexes | PLGA, Chitosan | Excellent release properties. Prolonged and efficient gene silencing | [ | |
| GADPH siRNA | Zein | Offers proper encapsulation with intact bioactivity of siRNA. High loading efficiency. Ensure the sufficient release of siRNA. High cellular attachment and transfection efficiency. More significant gene knockdown. | [ | |
| REST siRNA (siREST) | PCL | Controlled REST knockdown of specific neuronal cells. Prominently induced the desired gene silencing. Generate functional neurons as therapeutics. | [ | |
| Surface Modification | pDNA (pGL3 encoding luciferase) | PLA, PEI | High cultivation period (>5 d). Large surface-to-volume ratio and highly flexible. Manageable transgene expression. | [ |
| pDNA (Plasmid EGFP-N2) | HAp, PDLLA | Facilitate > 95% of the accumulated release (>14 d). High cell viability and density. High GFP expression. | [ | |
| pDNA (pEGFP-N1) | PEG/PECL with LPEI | High transfection efficiency. MMp-responsive control release. | [ | |
| siRNA | PEG-PECL with LPEI | MMP-2 responsive siRNA release. Excellence gene silencing effects. Facilitates neo-collagen accumulation at the wound sites. Wound recovery can restore to normal levels. Improve the prognosis of diabetic ulcers. Low toxicity. | [ | |
| REST siRNA (siREST) | PECL | High loading efficiency. Prevent initial burst release. Enhance gene knockdown efficiency. Increase neuronal markers expressions. Reduce glial cell commitment. | [ | |
| hTERT siRNA | ZnGa2O4: Cr | Increase the siRNA concentration in-situ. High cellular transfection efficiency. Enhance gene silencing effects. | [ | |
| REST siRNA (siREST, s11932) | PCL | Low toxic. Prominently induced the desired gene silencing. | [ | |
| Silencer® COLA1 siRNA (siCOLA1) | PCLEEP | Prolonged the availability of siRNA (≥30 d). High cellular transfection efficiency. Ensure genetic intervention. | [ | |
| Electrostatic Interaction | pDNA (pCMVβ encoding β-galactosidase) | PLGA, PLA-PEG | Up to 80% of intact released of pDNA (>20 d). Capable of cell transfection and bioactivity. Able of tissue regeneration. Capable to deliver a combination of genes in a controllable sequence. | [ |
| siRNA | Palmitoyl-GGGAAAKRK peptide (P-G3A3KRK) | Provide localized targeted gene delivery. Ensure intracellular uptake. Enhance siRNA residence time in the brain region. Successfully downregulate the specific gene expression and increase the apoptosis rate. Ensure genetic intervention. | [ | |
| DCEF | pDNA (pEGFP-C3) | Alginate/PCL | Improve gene immobilization. Enhance cell adhesion, viability, and proliferation. High Transfection efficiency. Biocompatible. Tissue Regeneration. | [ |
| Controlling fibrous capsule formation | Silencer® COL1A1 siRNA (siCOL1A1) | PCLEEP | Localized and sustained delivery (>28 d). High loading efficiency. Downregulates COL1A1 both in vitro and in vivo. Enhance cellular uptake. Prominently induced the desired gene silencing. | [ |
pDNA: plasmid DNA, PEG: polyethylene glycol, PLA: poly(lactide), PDLLA: poly(d,l-lactide), PLGA: poly(lactide-co-glycolide), PEI: poly (ethyleneimine), HA: hyaluronic acid, PCL: poly(caprolactone), PECL: poly(ε-caprolactone), PELA: poly(dl-lactide)–poly(ethylene glycol), Hap: hydroxyapetite, P4VP: poly(4-vinyl pyridine), LPEI: linear polyethyleneimine, ELP: elastin-like polypeptides, siRNA: short interfering RNA, PEG: polyethylene glycol, PLGA: poly(lactide-co-glycolide), PCL: poly(caprolactone), PECL: poly(ε-caprolactone), LPEI: linear polyethyleneimine, PCLEEP: poly(ε-caprolactone-co-ethyl ethylene phosphate), ZnGa2O4:Cr: chromium-doped zinc gallate.
Figure 6Schematic of the synthesis of growth factor loaded electrospun nanofiber with the controlled release properties (a), and VEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor) release profile with respect to time from PCL nanofibers (Reproduced from ref no [123] with permission from ACS Publications, 2018) (b).