Nano-and Micromotors Designed for Cancer Therapy
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Reduced drug concentration due to specific targeting possibilities, which results in less side effects and in lower costs.
- A reduced amount of active pharmaceuticals consequentially leads to a reduced amount of waste products. Generally, pharmaceuticals are metabolized or simply excreted by the body after their use, leading to high concentrations in sewage waters, which are very often difficult to remediate in water treatment plants. This is not only the case for cancer medicine, but due to the high cytotoxicity of these compounds are especially dangerous for living organisms in aquatic systems [39].
- Compared to passive drug delivery agents, the use of nano- and micromotors bears the advantage, that propulsion is independent from the blood flow. Smart engineered drug carriers display additional advantages, especially when combined with other approaches, such as encapsulation, targeting moieties on the surface, cell or gene delivery. Drug delivery with on-demand site-specific release becomes especially useful for pharmaceuticals causing severe side effects, such as those used in cancer therapy.
- The high variability among nano-and micromotors allows the incorporation of different features provided by the drug delivery community, such as drug protection by encapsulation [40,41,42], selectivity by combination with selective biomarkers and, in case of nano-scaled motors, the ability to penetrate tissue.
- A remote trigger mechanism to release the drug at the desired location can be implemented using micromotors. This has been introduced into micromotion using piezo induced changes [43] but also in strategies like molecular valves are envisioned [44,45]. The full overview of demonstrated examples of controlled drug release for cancer therapy by nano-and micromotors is displayed in Table 1, Table 2 and Table 3.
- The first point to list here is often (also in many current publications) the use of highly reactive fuels, such as hydrogen peroxide or hydrazine or ultraviolet (UV) light to achieve propulsion. Even though alternative strategies are being developed, many propulsion mechanisms are not fully compatible with the use in body fluids, but this will be discussed in detail in Section 2.
- Particles require nanoscale dimensions for passage through tissues. For achieving an enhanced permeability and retention (EPR) effect usually dimensions up to 180 nm are assumed. According to a study of the Fischer group for penetrating mucus a particle size not larger than 100 nm seems to be beneficial for passing through hydrogel networks [46]. Additionally, the particle size plays an important role in biologically relevant processes such as the circulation and biodistribution of nanoparticles. Currently, most balistically moving nano-and micromotors are in the micrometer scale rather than lower nanometer scale.
- As an opposing fact to the previous point, Brownian rotation dominates for particle sizes below 800 nm. Here, the particle orientations are randomized and only Brownian motion or random walks are expected. Motion control is, however, crucial for targeted drug delivery, but fabrication, integration, modification and motor-cargo integration are still rather challenging below 100 nm.
- The materials employed for nano- and micromotor design are mostly chosen for functionality rather than biocompatibility, which can often lead to toxic components in motors. For clinical applications these need to be adapted and optimized concerning their non-toxicity, as well as their ability to be scaled up to allow high through-put fabrication.
- Most nano- and micromotors are still rather slow, so that large distances in the body would require long action times or, if applicable, high fuel concentrations. Further, careful navigation to avoid tissue damage might still be recommendable or injection to areas close to the tumor site is necessary.
2. Propulsion Strategies
2.1. Chemically Based Strategies
2.1.1. Electrophoresis
2.1.2. Self-Diffusiophoresis
H2O2 as Fuel
Developments towards More Biocompatible Fuels
2.1.3. Bubble Propulsion
H2O2 as Fuel
Developments towards More Biocompatible Fuels
2.2. Energy Transferred by External Fields
2.2.1. Electric Fields
2.2.2. Magnetic Fields
2.2.3. Acoustically Driven Systems
2.2.4. Light
2.3. Biological Constituents for Nano- and Micromotors
2.3.1. Structural Units
2.3.2. Loading Units
Blood Cells
Viruses
Spores
2.3.3. Propulsion Units
Bacteria
Sperm Cells
Algae
2.4. Shape-Changing Nano-and Micromotors for Cancer Therapy
3. Performance Optimization
3.1. Power Transmission
3.2. Loading
3.3. Guidance
3.4. Release
3.5. In Vivo Imaging
3.6. Retrieval of Micromotors
4. Outlook
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Carrier Material | Drug | Target | Propulsion | Guidance | Release | Speed [µm/s] | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
phoretic propulsion | |||||||
Ni/(Au50/Ag50)/Ni/Pt nanowire | DOX on PLGA particles and liposomes | - | self-electrophoresis (5% H2O2) | magnetic | drag force | 9 | [57] |
polymersome stomatocyte/Pt | DOX | HeLa cells | self-electrophoresis (4.98 mM H2O2) | chemotactic, H2O2 gradient | glutathione assisted | 35 | [61] |
PM/Pt microparticles | DOX | T47D cells | diffusiophoresis (2.5wt% H2O2) | magnetic | diffusion | 1.25 | [62] |
mesoporous SiO2/urease | DOX | HeLa cells | diffusiophoresis (urea) | - | urea supported | - | [70] |
SiO2/PEG/urease | anti-FGFR3 | bladder cancer cells | diffusiophoresis (urea) | via anti-FGFR3 | [74] | ||
bubble propulsion | |||||||
(PSS-PAH)5/Ni/Au/CAT | DOX | - | O2 (0.5% H2O2) | magnetic | heat (NIR light) | 25 | [79] |
mesoporous SiO2/Cr/Pt | DOX | HeLa cells | O2 (0.2% H2O2) | - | catalytic hydrolysis of lipid bilayers | 3.6 | [80] |
Virus/Pt | tamoxifen | MDA-231 | O2 (1.5% H2O2) | acid-supported | - | 4.15 | [81] |
Pt NP/(CHI/ALG)18 nanotube | DOX | HeLa cells | O2 (H2O2) | magnetic | ultrasound | 22 | [89] |
(PLL/BSA)10 -CAT-AuNPs | DOX | HeLa cells | O2 (0.5% H2O2) | magnetic | NIR light, gelatin melting | 4 | [90] |
polymersome stomatocyte/Pt/Ni | DOX | HeLa cells | O2 (1.5% v/v H2O2) | magnetic | - | 12.4 | [92] |
polymersome stomatocyte/Pt | DOX | HeLa cells | O2 (4.98 mM H2O2) | acid buffer | 39 | [93] | |
ZIF-67 | DOX | - | O2 (1% H2O2) | magnetic | through H2O2 | 15.32 | [94] |
CaCO3/Co | - | HeLa cells | CO2 (acid) | - | - | 0.544 | [100] |
Polyamide/L-arginine (HLA) | particle itself | MCF-7 cells, HUVECs | NO (L-arginine and 20% H2O2) | 3 | [101] |
Carrier Material | Drug | Loading Mechanism | Target | Propulsion | Guidance | Release | Speed [µm/s] | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
FeGa@P(VDF-TrFE) nanowires | Paclitaxel | polydopamine functionalization | MDA MB 231 | magnetically | piezoelectric | alternating magnetic field | - | [122] |
Hydrogel grippers and polycaprolactone particles | docetaxel (DTX) | Closing the gripper | / | magnetically | magnetic | Opening the gripper | - | [109] |
Au-Ni-Au nanorods with nanoporous segments | DOX | Electrostatic interaction with the drug | HeLa cells | ultrasound | magnetic | Photothermal (NIR) | 60 | [133] |
Carrier material | Drug | Target | Propulsion | Guidance | Release | Speed[µm/s] | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Structural units | |||||||
plant-based microtubes | camptothecin | HeLa cells | magnetic | magnetic | drilling into cells, diffusion | [128] | |
Loading units | |||||||
red blood cells | DOX | - | ultrasound | magnetic | photothermal | 50 | |
Propulsion units | |||||||
MC-1 magnetotactic bacteria | SN-38 | HCT116 colorectal xenografts | bacterial flagella | magnetic aerotaxis | endocytosis of liposomes | [40] | |
S. typhimurium bacteria | paclitaxel | breast cancer cells | bacterial flagella | - | endocytosis of liposomes | 3 | [149] |
E. coli bacteria | DOX | 4Z T1 breast cancer cells | bacterial flagella | magnetic, chemotaxis | pH-dependent diffusion | 10 | [148] |
E. coli bioadhesive bacteriabot | PMMA | mannose expressing cell line (HTB-9 cells) | bacterial flagella | - | adhesion to mannose-expressing cell surfaces | [182] | |
E. coli with red blood cells | DOX | - | bacterial flagella | magnetic | pH-dependent drug release from blood cells, NIR-triggered termination of bacteria | 10 | [147] |
S. typhimurium NanoBEADS | - | tumor spheroids | bacterial flagella | bacteria translocation and proliferation | - | - | [150] |
bovine sperm | DOX | tumor spheroids | sperm flagellum | magnetic | cell-cell-fusion | 41 | [145] |
sea squirt sperm | DOX | ovarian cancer cells | sperm flagellum | chemotaxis | pH-induced death of sperm cells | 200 | [144] |
human sperm | DOX | HeLa cells & human ovarian cancer tissue | sperm flagella | magnetic | cell-cell fusion | - | [187] |
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Sonntag, L.; Simmchen, J.; Magdanz, V. Nano-and Micromotors Designed for Cancer Therapy. Molecules 2019, 24, 3410. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules24183410
Sonntag L, Simmchen J, Magdanz V. Nano-and Micromotors Designed for Cancer Therapy. Molecules. 2019; 24(18):3410. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules24183410
Chicago/Turabian StyleSonntag, Luisa, Juliane Simmchen, and Veronika Magdanz. 2019. "Nano-and Micromotors Designed for Cancer Therapy" Molecules 24, no. 18: 3410. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules24183410
APA StyleSonntag, L., Simmchen, J., & Magdanz, V. (2019). Nano-and Micromotors Designed for Cancer Therapy. Molecules, 24(18), 3410. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules24183410