| Literature DB >> 35630713 |
Zuzanna Bober1, Dorota Bartusik-Aebisher2, David Aebisher1.
Abstract
The application of dendrimeric constructs in medical diagnostics and therapeutics is increasing. Dendrimers have attracted attention due to their compact, spherical three-dimensional structures with surfaces that can be modified by the attachment of various drugs, hydrophilic or hydrophobic groups, or reporter molecules. In the literature, many modified dendrimer systems with various applications have been reported, including drug and gene delivery systems, biosensors, bioimaging contrast agents, tissue engineering, and therapeutic agents. Dendrimers are used for the delivery of macromolecules, miRNAs, siRNAs, and many other various biomedical applications, and they are ideal carriers for bioactive molecules. In addition, the conjugation of dendrimers with antibodies, proteins, and peptides allows for the design of vaccines with highly specific and predictable properties, and the role of dendrimers as carrier systems for vaccine antigens is increasing. In this work, we will focus on a review of the use of dendrimers in cancer diagnostics and therapy. Dendrimer-based nanosystems for drug delivery are commonly based on polyamidoamine dendrimers (PAMAM) that can be modified with drugs and contrast agents. Moreover, dendrimers can be successfully used as conjugates that deliver several substances simultaneously. The potential to develop dendrimers with multifunctional abilities has served as an impetus for the design of new molecular platforms for medical diagnostics and therapeutics.Entities:
Keywords: MRI; PAMAM dendrimers; targeted drug delivery; theranostics
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35630713 PMCID: PMC9144149 DOI: 10.3390/molecules27103237
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.927
Figure 1Dendrimers applications.
Figure 2Diagram of a dendrimer structure.
Figure 3The divergent method of dendrimer synthesis.
Figure 4The convergent method of dendrimer synthesis.
Figure 5Various analytical techniques for the characterization of dendrimers.
Use of various dendrimer conjugates with pharmaceutically active substances.
| Surname, Year | Type of Dendrimer/Fluorination | Application and Results | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wang et al., 2021 | Nano-in-Nano Dendrimer Gel Particles with brimonidine tartrate (BT) and timolol maleate (TM) | Efficient topical delivery of antiglaucoma drugs into the eye. | [ |
| Bartusik-Aebisher et al., 2021 | Trastuzumab-dendrimer-fluorine | To treat breast cancer cells in vitro, monitored by MRI measurements. | [ |
| Mekonnen et al., 2019 | Gadolinium ferrite nanoparticle in generation 4.5 poly(amidoamine) dendrimer | G4.5-GdIO is a promising alternative non-invasive MRI-tracked anti-cancer drug delivery | [ |
| Marcinkowska et al., 2018 | Conjugate of PAMAM Dendrimer, Doxorubicin, and Monoclonal Antibody—Trastuzumab: | Use in HER-2 positive (SKBR-3) and negative (MCF-7) human breast cancer cell lines. | [ |
| Mirzaei et al., 2015 | Anionic linear globular dendrimer (ALGDG2) | Use of nanoconjugate in 1H-NMR imaging and | [ |
| Jain et al., 2015 | G5 conjugated with Muramyl | There was a significant reduction in toxicity in the haemolytic toxicity and cytotoxicity studies in R774A.1 erythrocytes and macrophage cells. | [ |
| Marcinkowska et al., 2015 | PAMAM dendrimer-trastuzumab conjugates that contain docetaxel or paclitaxel | It was shown to be highly toxic to SKBR-3 HER-2 positive cells and lowly toxic to MCF-7 HER-2 | [ |
| Ma et al., 2015 | TMAB-poliamidoamina (PAMAM) with paklitaksel (PTX) | PAMAM conjugated to TMAB was taken up by BT474 cells overexpressing HER-2 more efficiently than MCF-7 cells, which expressed lower levels of HER-2. | [ |
| Leng et al., 2013 | G4 conjugated with chitosan I | Improvement of the cytotoxicity of free | [ |
| Rouhollah et al., 2013 | G2, G3, G4, and G7 dendrimers conjugated with magnetic nanoparticles (Fe3O4) and DOX | G4 Fe3O4 dendrimer releases most of the drug at a lower pH, proving to be the most acceptable generation for effective DOX delivery. | [ |
| Mullen et al., 2010 | G5 PAMAM dendrimer | In this study, the amide coupling methods commonly used to conjugate ligands to poly(amidoamine) (PAMAM) dendrimers were examined. | [ |
| Wang et al., 2003 | G3-Polihydroksyalkanian/Tamsulosin | Drug solubility is purported to be improved by amine-terminated dendrimers. | [ |
Figure 6Application of MRI.
Use of dendrimers as contrast agents in in vitro studies.
| Surname, Year | Type of | Application and Results | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|
| Song et al., 2021 | Core-shell tecto | MRI through an amplified passive EPR effect and also | [ |
| Zhang et al., 2020 | OEG Gn-PROXYL | Used as contrast agents in MRI | [ |
| Shrestha et al., 2020 | Gadolinium complexes attached to poly ethoxy ethyl glycinamide | As contrast agents with enhanced relaxation in MRI | [ |
| Hectors et al., 2018 | G5 dendrimer, G2 | Multiagent DCE-MRI (combination of contrast agents and low and high molecular weight) to improve the accuracy of the | [ |
| Kondo et al., 2017 | Chiral dendrimer | Chiral dendrimer Gd-MRI CAs, which showed high r1 values; association constant values (Ka) of S-isomeric dendrimer CAs to bovine serum albumin (BSA) were higher than those of | [ |
| Luong et al., 2017 | Folic | Polyvalent theranostic nanocarrier consisting of | [ |
| Gündüz et al., 2016 | Poly(amidoamine) | MRI contrast agents; CA provides a longer tissue retention time due to its high molecular weight and size | [ |
| Gündüz et al., 2016 | Generation 4 (G4) | They developed a nanosized, calcium-sensitive dendrimeric probe that changes longitudinal and transverse relaxation times | [ |
| Haribabu et al., 2016 | 3G polyamidoamide (PAMAM) dendrimers | MRI contrast agents, dual mode (T1 and T2) contrast agent based on folic acid functionalized manganese ferrite | [ |
| Miyake et al., 2015 | 1st, 2nd, and | MRI contrast agents (Gd-MRI CAs), which showed | [ |
| Huang et al., 2015 | Paramagnetic dendrimers up to the fourth generation (i.e., G1-G4); poly(amido amine) (PAMAM) | Create a dual-modality nanosized contrast agent | [ |
| Malone et al., 2015 | 5th-generation PAMAM dendrimer | Cell-penetrating peptides and their Gd-loaded dendrimeric form (ACPPD-Gd) have been shown to selectively | [ |
| Bhuiyan et al., 2015 | G5-PAMAM dendrimer | The MRI contrast agent | [ |
| Cai et al., 2015 | Multilayers of | Efficient nanoprobe for the targeted dual mode CT/MR imaging of a xenografted tumor model | [ |
| Yu et al., 2015 | 1st-generation dendron (G1-OH); dendrons 3, 10, 12, 14 | The dendrimer is characterized by a strong 19F NMR peak and short relaxation times | [ |
| Wang et al., 2014 | Bimodal nanoprobe | Quantitative 19F MRI and NIR fluorescence bioimaging and cell tracking | [ |
| Filippi et al., 2014 | Amphiphilic Janus dendrimers (dendrimersomes) | Efficient and versatile nanoplatform for biomedical imaging | [ |
| Ghalandarlaki et al., 2014 | Dendrimer-G1 | New nano contrast medium increases its effectiveness | [ |
| Lee and Ooya, 2012 | Polyglycerol dendrimers (PGDs) | Attenuation of 19F NMR signals with perfluorinated dendrimers | [ |
| Tanaka et al., 2012 | Water-soluble | Evaluation of glutathione reductase (GR) activity by 19F NMR spectroscopy; GR enzymatic activity was determined from the increase in the size of the 19F NMR signals | [ |
| Klemm et al., 2012 | Esteramide (EA) dendrimer; PLLG2[Asp(COOH)PEO]8 Polylysine Dendrimer; Yb-TREN-Dendrimer; Dy-TREN-Dendrimer; | MRI contrast agents; these conjugates have relaxivities up to 374 mM−1 s−1 per dendrimer, high bioavailability, and low in vitro toxicity. | [ |
| Chen et al., 2012 | 3rd-generation (G3) dendrimer | The integrin αvβ3 targeting ability of PEG-G3-(Gd-DTPA)6-(cRGD-DTPA)2 in vitro and in vivo was demonstrated | [ |
| Klemm et al., 2012 | Esteramide dendrimer (EA) | When covalently conjugated to a highly biocompatible esteramide dendrimer, T2 relaxation rates up to 52 mM−1 s−1 and T1 relaxation rates up to 31 mM−1 s−1 per gadolinium were observed under clinically relevant conditions | [ |
| Tanaka et al., 2011 | Perfluorinated dendrimers tethered on silica nanoparticles | Bimodal quantitative assay of enzymatic activity in (19) F NMR spectroscopy and fluorescence spectroscopy using a nanoparticle based molecular probe; | [ |
| Nwe et al., 2010 | 4, 5, and 6 PAMAM dendrimer | This report presents the preparation and characterization of three [Gd-C-DOTA](-1)-dendrimer assemblies by way of | [ |
| Tan et al., 2010 | G2, G3 | The peptide-targeted nanoglobular contrast agents showed greater contrast enhancement than the corresponding | [ |
Use of dendrimers as contrast agents in in vivo studies.
| Surname, Year | Type of Dendrimer/ | Application and Results | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chen et al., 2020 | 5 poly(amidoamine) dendrimers, encapsulated gold nanoparticles, chelated | Intravenous injection of this nanoparticle into mice with HER-2 positive breast tumors significantly increases the MRI signal intensity by ~20% and improves CT resolution and contrast by a factor of 2. | [ |
| Zamani et al., 2020 | Folic acid-conjugated G-3 | Breast cancer molecular imaging agent | [ |
| Mekuria et al., 2018 | G4.5 polyamidoamine | For the detection of a dual-channel carcinoma cell line | [ |
| Zhang et al., 2017 | Gadolinium-labeled | Increasing the T1 contrast capacity in in vivo magnetic | [ |
| Gonawala and Ali, 2017 | G5 PAMAM dendrimer | For in vivo MRI studies in a preclinical animal model of | [ |
| Zhou et al., 2017 | 4th-generation zwitterionized biodegradable dendritic contrast agent (DCA) | As a deoditrinated biodegradable dendritic contrast agent to enhance the MRI of liver metastases | [ |
| Mekuria et al., 2017 | G4.5 dendrimers | As double (T1 and T2) contrast agents in magnetic resonance imaging | [ |
| Filippi et al., 2017 | Amphiphilic Janus-dendrimers (dendrimersomes); 3,5-C12-EG-(OH)4 | As a contrast agent, T1 weighted enhancement in the tumor area | [ |
| Xiong et al., 2016 | Fourth-generation | As a contrast agent for imaging the animal aorta, renal artery, | [ |
| Li et al., 2016 | Dendrimer nanoprobe labeled with cyclic arginine-glycine-aspartic acid | A contrast agent to differentiate the degree of liver fibrosis; the MR T1 signal weighted value increased in parallel with the | [ |
| Filippi et al., 2015 | Amphiphilic | Performance improvement in in vivo MRI studies in mice | [ |
| Chen et al., 2015 | Amine-terminated | For targeted dual-mode computed tomography (CT)/magnetic resonance (MR) imaging of small tumors. | [ |
| Yang et al., 2015 | G5 dendrimer | Targeted magnetic resonance (MR) imaging of C6 glioma cells. | [ |
| Nguyen et al., 2015 | Manganese (Mn) G8 dendrimers | For imaging atherosclerotic lesions with 3 Tesla MRI. | [ |
| Li et al., 2013 | Amine-terminated | A contrast agent for magnetic resonance (MR)/computed | [ |
| Chen et al., 2013 | Amine-terminated | For imaging tumors in CT and MRI, it shows a high intensity of radiation suppression and improved MRI contrast. | [ |
| Mohamadi et al., 2013 | Dendrimer G1 | The uptake of the drug into the liver hepatocellular cell line and the drug cytotoxicity were evaluated. It also increases the | [ |
| Ye et al., 2013 | 2nd-generation dendrimer (G2) | Biodegradable dendritic contrast agent (DCA) (FA-PEG-G2-DTPA-Gd) was prepared from a polyester dendrimer conjugated with gadolinium (Gd) chelates and PEG chains with | [ |
| Wen et al., 2013 | Amine-terminated generation five poly(amidoamine) dendrimers (G5.NH2) | Were used as templates to synthesize gold nanoparticles (AuNPs). With the coexistence of the two radiodense imaging | [ |
| Andolina et al., 2012 | Esteramide dendrimer (EA) | DyN1-EA had the largest ionic T(1) relaxivity, 7.60 mM−1 s−1, | [ |
| Huang et al., 2012 | Individual dendrimers | Biodegradable DNCs were prepared with polydisulfide linkages between the individual dendrimers. DNCs possessed a circulation half-life of >1.6 h in mice and produced significant contrast enhancement in the abdominal aorta and kidneys for as long as 4 h. | [ |
| Lim et al., 2012 | Dendrimers generation 5 and 3 (G3 and G5) and four gadolinium (Gd)-based | These triazine dendrimer-based MRI contrast agents exhibit several promising features such as high in vivo r1 relaxivity, desirable pharmacokinetics, and well-defined structure. | [ |
| Nwe et al., 2012 | Dendrimer G4 and G5, Gd-DOTA (G4SS30, G5SS58), | The in vitro molar relaxivity of the Ab-(G4S15)(4) conjugate measured at pH 7.4, 22 °C, and 3T showed a moderate increase in relaxivity as compared to Magnevist (6.7 vs. 4.0 mM−1 s−1, while the Ab-(G5S29)(4) conjugate was two-fold higher (9.1 vs. 4.0 mM−1 s−1. | [ |
| Luo et al., 2011 | Third generation (G3) | In vivo studies have shown that the mPEGylated Gd(III)-based dendrimer provided much higher signal intensity enhancement (SI) in mouse kidneys, especially at 60 min | [ |
| Kojima et al., 2011 | PAMAM dendrimers | Surface-PEGylated Gd-PAMAM dendrimers showed | [ |
| Nwe et al., 2010 | PAMAM dendrimer generation 4 (G4 dendrimer), gadolinium-dendrimer | The macrocyclic-based agent is the more suitable agent for in vivo use for these reasons combined with kinetics. | [ |