| Literature DB >> 32610448 |
Seyoung Hong1, Dong Wook Choi2, Hong Nam Kim3, Chun Gwon Park4,5, Wonhwa Lee6, Hee Ho Park1.
Abstract
Nanoparticles have been extensively used as carriers for the delivery of chemicals and biomolecular drugs, such as anticancer drugs and therapeutic proteins. Natural biomolecules, such as proteins, are an attractive alternative to synthetic polymers commonly used in nanoparticle formulation because of their safety. In general, protein nanoparticles offer many advantages, such as biocompatibility and biodegradability. Moreover, the preparation of protein nanoparticles and the corresponding encapsulation process involved mild conditions without the use of toxic chemicals or organic solvents. Protein nanoparticles can be generated using proteins, such as fibroins, albumin, gelatin, gliadine, legumin, 30Kc19, lipoprotein, and ferritin proteins, and are prepared through emulsion, electrospray, and desolvation methods. This review introduces the proteins used and methods used in generating protein nanoparticles and compares the corresponding advantages and disadvantages of each.Entities:
Keywords: biocompatible; biodegradable; controlled release; drug delivery; protein nanoparticle
Year: 2020 PMID: 32610448 PMCID: PMC7407889 DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics12070604
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceutics ISSN: 1999-4923 Impact factor: 6.321
Figure 1Delivery of protein nanoparticle to the cell. Intracellular delivery of insoluble drugs by protein nanoparticles via the endocytosis process. Protein nanoparticles have several advantages as a drug delivery system, such as increased stability and activity due to increased protection from enzymatic degradation, immunogenicity, phagocytosis, and renal clearance, thereby leading an increase in the half-life of the drug.
Figure 2Categorization of methods for preparing protein nanoparticles. (a) The chemical method produces protein nanoparticles using a chemical reaction and includes emulsion and complex coacervation. (b) The physical method includes physically aggregating after separating proteins into nanosized particles and includes an electrospray technique and a nano spray drying method. (c) The self-assembly method is a method of making nanoparticles by agglutinating proteins by themselves and it includes the desolvation method.
Advantages and disadvantages of each protein nanoparticles.
| Material | Advantage | Disadvantage |
|---|---|---|
| Silk protein fibroin | High stability | Sericin may cause immunogenic reactions |
| Human serum albumin | High stability | Expensive cost |
| Gliadin | Biocompatibility | Large particle size |
| Gelatin | Biocompatibility | Low mechanical strength |
| Legumin | Bioadhesive | Low yield |
| 30Kc19 | High stability | Low nanoparticle size and yield when using only 30Kc19α |
| Lipoprotein | Non-immunogenicity | Difficult to separate native LDL |
| Ferritin | High stability | High cost |
Advantages and disadvantages of each protein nanoparticle generation methods.
| Method | Advantage | Disadvantage |
|---|---|---|
| Emulsion/solvent extraction | High stability | Generating particles larger than those obtained by desolvation |
| Polyelectrolyte complexation/complex coacervation method | High stability | Difficulty of scale-up |
| Electrospray technique | High stability | Low flow |
| Nano spray drying | Control of particle size, shape, and morphology | Limited to small-scale production |
| Desolvation method | High stability | Only possible for proteins that can be minimally affected by the de-soluble process itself or diluted by transporter proteins |
| Self-assembly | High encapsulation efficiency | Difficult to control the size and shape of nanoparticles. |
Figure 3(a) The emulsion process is a method of forming nanoparticles by removing solvent/non-solvent after an emulsion system is formed by dispersing via mechanical agitation or ultrasonic waves. Moreover, a double emulsion method was also used. (b) The complex coacervation method adjusts the pH to producing the protein cationic or anionic and then interacts with other polymers to produce nanoparticles.
Figure 4(a) Nano spray drying is the process of releasing and drying a protein liquid jet stream with a nozzle using heated nitrogen and carbon dioxide gas to produce nanoparticles. (b) The electrospray technique generates nanoparticles by ejecting a liquid jet stream through a nozzle that forms an aerosolized droplet by applying a high voltage to a protein solution supplied through a nebulizer.
Figure 5(a) In the self-assembly method, individual protein chains are dissolved in an aqueous solution and a CMT exceeding the CMC to spontaneously generate protein micelles during the formation of nanosized aggregates. (b) In the desolvation method, nanoparticles are prepared through a simple process of adding a desolvating agent to a protein solution containing drugs.