Currently, nano-carriers for anti-cancer drug delivery are complex systems, which struggle with immunogenicity and enhanced permeability effect (EPR)-related problems that halt the clinical translation of many therapeutics. Consequently, a rapidly growing field of research has been focusing on biomimetic nano-vesicles (BNVs) as an effective delivery alternative. Nevertheless, the translation of many BNVs is limited due to scalability problems, inconsistent production process, and insufficient loading efficiency.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNanoghosts (NGs) are nanovesicles reconstructed from the cytoplasmic membranes of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs). By retaining MSC membranes, the NGs retain the ability of these cells to home in on multiple tumors, laying the foundations, thereby, for the development of a targeted drug delivery platform. The susceptibility of MSCs to functional changes, following their exposure to cytokines or cancer-derived conditioned-media (CM), presents the opportunity to modify the NGs by conditioning their source cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe rapid development of biomimetic cell membrane-based nanoparticles is still overshadowed by many practical challenges, one of which is the difficulty to precisely measure the biodistribution of such nanoparticles. Currently, this challenge is mostly addressed using fluorescent techniques with limited sensitivity, or radioactive labeling methods, which rarely account for the nanoparticles themselves, but their payloads instead. Here we report the development of a robust method for the innate radioactive labeling of cells and membrane-based nanoparticles and their consequent sensitive detection and biodistribution measurements.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: Injectable scaffolds for cardiac tissue regeneration are a promising therapeutic approach for progressive heart failure following myocardial infarction (MI). Their major advantage lies in their delivery modality that is considered minimally invasive due to their direct injection into the myocardium. Biomaterials comprising such scaffolds should mimic the cardiac tissue in terms of composition, structure, mechanical support, and most importantly, bioactivity.
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