Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5207943 | Progress in Polymer Science | 2016 | 78 Pages |
Abstract
Polycations are useful delivery vehicles for nucleic acids and proteins. Physicochemical properties, safety, and cost are important design parameters for polycation-enabled controlled release methods. Improvements in the design and biocompatibility of synthetic polycations and complexes thereof are necessary for clinical applications. This review focuses on breakthroughs in the development of biocompatible polycations and their biomedical applications in the past 10 years. First, we summarize current strategies to develop naturally derived and synthetic polycations and describe the most commonly used polycations. Second, we discuss polycation-mediated non-viral gene delivery systems used for tissue engineering and regenerative medicine. Third, we review the development of polycation-mediated self-assembled systems for the delivery of heparin-binding proteins, with an emphasis on translational potential. Finally, we introduce platforms for fabricating polycation-based complexes, including layer-by-layer assembly, polymeric vesicles, polycation-containing microspheres, and approaches to improve the functionality of delivery complexes. With improvements in polycation design, safety, and efficacy, polycation-based controlled delivery is expected to contribute significantly to tissue repair and regeneration applications.
Keywords
PEIEGFRPLGApDNAEGFDOXPCLPRSSMCCDPPAAASCGFPPPIBMALbLCoacervatePSIRBCHUVECIL-10TLRFGF-2PDGFPEDPLLCHDPMNSDF-1αHGFLPDMDSCsVEGFRSPIOPASPαSMAP-gpPASADOTAPDSPEpMLCPAGscRGD1,2-Distearoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolaminePDEADMAEMAPBAEPDMAEMAPolypropyleniminePolycationpEGFPOligoethyleniminecPLAPVAlTGF-βEGDELPNspolymorphonucleocyteBSAP-glycoproteinpHPMASmall interfering RNAsiRNAbovine serum albuminEthylene glycol diglycidyl etherα-smooth muscle actinSuperparamagnetic iron oxideInterleukin-10coronary heart diseasetransforming growth factor-βGrowth factor deliveryToll-like receptorPDPAShhDOTMADoxorubicinDimethylaminoethyl methacrylateadipose-derived stromal cellHuman umbilical vein endothelial cellSmooth muscle cellmuscle-derived stem cellssonic hedgehogepidermal growth factorHepatocyte growth factorStromal cell-derived factor-1αGrowth factorVascular endothelial growth factorVascular Endothelial Growth Factor (VEGF)platelet-derived growth factorfibroblast growth factor-2lactate dehydrogenaseLDHLayer-by-layerBMPTissue engineeringMolecular weightPAMAMgreen fluorescent proteinBone morphogenetic proteinProtamine sulfatePlasmid DNApoly(2-(dimethylamino)ethyl methacrylate)Poly(2-ethyl-2-oxazoline)Poly(ɛ-caprolactone)Poly(β-amino ester)poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid)Poly(succinimide)Poly(l-leucine)poly(amidoamine)PolyethyleniminePoly(ethylene glycol)Poly(aspartic acid)poly(acrylic acid)Poly(vinyl alcohol)Poly-l-lysinePEGPolystyreneGene therapyred blood cellvascular endothelial growth factor receptorEpidermal growth factor receptor
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Organic Chemistry
Authors
Kyobum Kim, William C.W. Chen, Yunhoe Heo, Yadong Wang,