| Literature DB >> 32365938 |
Maria Cristina Bonferoni1, Elisabetta Gavini2, Giovanna Rassu2, Marcello Maestri3, Paolo Giunchedi2.
Abstract
Chitosan nanoparticles are well-known delivery systems widely used as polymeric carriers in the field of nanomedicine. Chitosan is a carbohydrate of natural origin: it is a biodegradable, biocompatible, mucoadhesive, polycationic polymer and it is endowed with penetration enhancer properties. Furthermore, it can be easily derivatized. Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) represents a remarkable health problem because current therapies, that include surgery, liver transplantation, trans-arterial embolization, chemoembolization and chemotherapy, present significant limitations due to the high risk of recurrence, to a lack of drug selectivity and to other serious side effects. Therefore, there is the need for new therapeutic strategies and for improving the liver-targeting to HCC. Nanomedicine consists in the use of nanoscale carriers as delivery systems to target and deliver drugs and/or diagnostic agents to specific organs or tissues. Chitosan and its derivatives can be successfully used in the preparation of nanoparticles that, for their peculiar surface-properties, can specifically interact with liver tumor, by passive and active targeting. This review concerns the use of chitosan nanoparticles for the therapy and theranostics of HCC and liver-targeting.Entities:
Keywords: HCC; chitosan; hepatic surgery; liver-targeting; nanoparticles; theranostics
Year: 2020 PMID: 32365938 PMCID: PMC7279387 DOI: 10.3390/nano10050870
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanomaterials (Basel) ISSN: 2079-4991 Impact factor: 5.076
Figure 1Therapeutic strategies for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC).
Figure 2Cirrhotic liver (A). An intraoperative near-infrared fluorescence (NIR) examination (B) confirms an HCC (C).
Figure 3Chemical structure of chitosan.
Chitosan nanoparticles designed for the treatment of HCC and liver-targeting: the therapeutic/theranostic effect and cell cultures used in the study are reported for each reference.
| Carrier | Payload | Effect | Cell Culture | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chitosan | - | anti-cancer | BEL7402; H22 | [ |
| Chitosan | - | anti-cancer | BEL7402 | [ |
| Chitosan | - | anti-cancer inhibition of lipid peroxidation | - | [ |
| Chitosan | - | anti-cancer | HepG2 | [ |
| Chitosan | - | anti-cancer | - | [ |
| Chitosan | 125I-labeled 5-Iodo-2′deoxyuridine | anti-cancer | HepG2 | [ |
| Chitosan | hydroxycamptothecin | anti-cancer | HepG2 | [ |
| Chitosan | CD147 antibody | anti-cancer tumor necrosis | HepG2 | [ |
| Chitosan | doxorubicin | anti-cancer | HepG2 | [ |
| Chitosan-PLGA | epirubicin | anti-cancer anti-angiogenic | - | [ |
| Chitosan-PLA | piceatannol | anti-cancer anti-oxidant | HepG2 | [ |
| Chitosan iron oxide | SPIONs | magnetic resonance imaging(MRI) | - | [ |
Figure 4Galactosylated chitosan.
Galactosylated-chitosan nanoparticles designed for the treatment of HCC and liver-targeting: the therapeutic/theranostic effect and cell cultures used in the study are reported for each reference.
| Carrier | Payload | Effect | Cell Culture | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Galactosylated chitosan | plasmid DNA | anti-cancer | HepG2 | [ |
| Galactosylated chitosan | 5-fluorouracil | anti-cancer | - | [ |
| Galactosylated chitosan | adenosine triphosphate | anti-cancer | HepG2 | [ |
| Galactosylated chitosan–polycaprolactone | curcumin | anti-cancer | HepG2 | [ |
| Galactosylated-carboxymethyl chitosan | magnetic iron oxide | theranostics | - | [ |
| Galactosylated chitosan | triptolide | anti-cancer | - | [ |
| Galactosylated chitosan | gemcitabine | anti-cancer | - | [ |
Figure 5Glycyrrhizin conjugated chitosan.
Glycyrrhizin/glycyrrhetinic acid chitosan nanoparticles for the treatment of HCC and liver-targeting: the therapeutic/theranostic effect and cell cultures used in the study are reported for each reference.
| Carrier | Payload | Effect | Cell Culture | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Glycyrrhizin chitosan | - | liver targeting | hepatocytes | [ |
| Glycyrrhizin chitosan | lamivudine | anti-retroviral | - | [ |
| Glycyrrhizin chitosan | atorvastatin | reduction in hepatotoxicity | - | [ |
| Glycyrrhetinic acid chitosan/PEG | doxorubicin | anti-cancer | H22; | [ |
| Glycyrrhizin N-caproyl chitosan | - | liver targeting | H22; SMMC-7721 | [ |
| Glycyrrhizin O-CM chitosan | paclitaxel | anti-cancer | SMMC-7721 | [ |
| Glycyrrhetinic acid galactose chitosan | mouse IP-10 gene | liver targeting | - | [ |
Nanoparticles made of chitosan derivatives for the treatment of HCC and liver-targeting: the therapeutic/theranostic effect and cell cultures used in the study are reported for each reference.
| Carrier | Payload | Effect | Cell Culture | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Folate-conjugated chitosan | IP-10 gene | anticancer gene therapy | - | [ |
| Folate-conjugated chitosan | IP-10 gene | anticancer gene therapy | H22 | [ |
| Folated poly(ethylene glycol)-chitosan-graft-polyethylenimine | plasmid DNA | anticancer gene therapy | - | [ |
| Biotinylated chitosan | plasmid DNA | anticancer gene therapy | SMMC-7721 | [ |
| Biotin or biotin/avidin conjugated chitosan | trans-resveratrol | anticancer | - | [ |
| N,N,N-trimethyl chitosan | monoclonal antibodies | anticancer | HepG2 | [ |
| N,N,N-trimethyl chitosan | lactosyl-norcantharidin | anticancer | - | [ |
| 2-chloroethylamine HCl/N,N-dimethyl-2-chloroethylamine HCl combined chitosan | maidkin-siRNA | anticancer gene therapy | - | [ |
| N-succinyl chitosan | siRNA and doxorubicin | anticancer gene therapy | - | [ |
| Lactose marital carboxymethyl chitosan | adriamycin | anticancer | HU7; H22 | [ |
| Glycol Chitosan-5β-Cholanic Acid | - | tumor targeting | HT29 | [ |
Figure 6Folate-conjugated chitosan.
Figure 7Biotinylated chitosan.