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Cancer targeted nanoparticles specifically induce apoptosis in cancer cells and spare normal cells

journal contribution
posted on 2012-01-01, 00:00 authored by Jagat Kanwar, Rupinder Kanwar, G Mahidhara, H Cheung
Curing cancer is the greatest challenge for modern medicine and finding ways to minimize the adverse effects caused by chemotherapeutic agents is of importance in improving patient’s physical conditions. Traditionally, chemotherapy can induce various adverse effects, and these effects are mostly caused by the non-target specific properties of the chemotherapeutic compounds. Recently, the use of nanoparticles has been found to be capable of minimizing these drug-induced adverse effects in animals and in patients during cancer treatment. The use of nanoparticles allows various chemotherapeutic drugs to be targeted to cancer cells with lower dosages. In addition to this, the use of nanoparticles also allows various drugs to be administered to the subjects by an oral route. Here, locked nucleic acid (LNA)-modified epithelial cell adhesion molecules (EpCAM), aptamers (RNA nucleotide), and nucleolin (DNA nucleotide) aptamers have been developed and conjugated on anti-cancer drug-loaded nanocarriers for specific delivery to cancer cells and spare normal cells. Significant amounts of the drug loaded nanocarriers (92 ± 6 %) were found to distribute to the cancer cells at the tumour site and more interestingly, normal cells were unaffected in vitro and in vivo. In this review, the benefits of using nanoparticle-coated drugs in various cancer treatments are discussed. Various nanoparticles that have been tried in improving the target specificity and potency of chemotherapeutic compounds are also described.

History

Journal

Australian journal of chemistry

Volume

65

Issue

1

Pagination

5 - 14

Publisher

CSIRO

Location

Collingwood, VIC.

ISSN

0004-9425

eISSN

1445-0038

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2012, CSIRO

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