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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Nanogels as pharmaceutical carriers: finite networks of infinite capabilities.

TLDR
This work has shown that polyelectrolyte nanogels can readily incorporate oppositely charged low-molecular-mass drugs and biomacromolecules such as oligo- and polynucleotides (siRNA, DNA) as well as proteins.
Abstract
Nanogels are swollen nanosized networks composed of hydrophilic or amphiphilic polymer chains. They are developed as carriers for the transport of drugs, and can be designed to spontaneously incorporate biologically active molecules through formation of salt bonds, hydrogen bonds, or hydrophobic interactions. Polyelectrolyte nanogels can readily incorporate oppositely charged low-molecular-mass drugs and biomacromolecules such as oligo- and polynucleotides (siRNA, DNA) as well as proteins. The guest molecules interact electrostatically with the ionic polymer chains of the gel and become bound within the finite nanogel. Multiple chemical functionalities can be employed in the nanogels to introduce imaging labels and to allow targeted drug delivery. The latter can be achieved, for example, with degradable or cleavable cross-links. Recent studies suggest that nanogels have a very promising future in biomedical applications.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Endocytosis of Nanomedicines

TL;DR: This review describes the current experimental tools to study endocytosis of nanomedicines and provides specific examples from recent literature and the authors' own work on endocyTosis of Nanomedicine.
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Hydrogel Nanoparticles in Drug Delivery

TL;DR: Hydrogel nanoparticles have gained considerable attention in recent years as one of the most promising nanoparticulate drug delivery systems owing to their unique potentials via combining the characteristics of a hydrogel system with a nanoparticle, each with its own advantages and drawbacks.
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Engineered Nanoparticles for Drug Delivery in Cancer Therapy

TL;DR: It is anticipated that precisely engineered nanoparticles will emerge as the next-generation platform for cancer therapy and many other biomedical applications.
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Controlled drug delivery vehicles for cancer treatment and their performance.

TL;DR: The different types of materials used as delivery vehicles for chemotherapeutic agents and their structural characteristics that improve the therapeutic efficacy of their drugs are discussed and recent scientific advances in the area of chemotherapy are described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Glutathione-responsive nano-vehicles as a promising platform for targeted intracellular drug and gene delivery.

TL;DR: This paper will review recent results on GSH-responsive nano-vehicles in particular micelles, nanoparticles, capsules, polymersomes, nanogels, dendritic and macromolecular drug conjugates, and nano-sized nucleic acid complexes for controlled delivery of anti-cancer drugs and nucleic acids.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Stealth liposomes: review of the basic science, rationale, and clinical applications, existing and potential.

TL;DR: Stealth liposomes can be actively targeted with monoclonal antibodies or ligands and encapsulating active molecules, with high target efficiency and activity by synthetic modification of the terminal PEG molecule.
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Novel crosslinking methods to design hydrogels

TL;DR: In this overview, different chemical and physical crosslinking methods used for the design of biodegradable hydrogels are summarized and discussed.
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The development of microgels/nanogels for drug delivery applications

TL;DR: This review describes the recent developments of microgel/nanogel particles as drug delivery carriers for biological and biomedical applications, including stability for prolonged circulation in the blood stream, novel functionality for further bioconjugation, and biodegradability for sustained release of drugs for a desired period of time.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nano-engineering block copolymer aggregates for drug delivery

TL;DR: The key performance related properties the authors discuss are loading capacity, release kinetics, circulation time, biodistribution, size, size distribution and stability, to allow the reader to tailor-make block copolymer micelles for a particular application.
Journal ArticleDOI

Generation of Monodisperse Particles by Using Microfluidics: Control over Size, Shape, and Composition

TL;DR: A versatile new strategy for producing monodisperse solid particles with sizes from 20 to 1000 mm by using a microfluidic device and shaping the droplets in a microchannel and then solidifying these drops in situ either by polymerizing a liquid monomer or by lowering the temperature of a liquid that sets thermally.
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