Shape effects of filaments versus spherical particles in flow and drug delivery
Top Cited Papers
- 25 March 2007
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature Nanotechnology
- Vol. 2 (4) , 249-255
- https://doi.org/10.1038/nnano.2007.70
Abstract
Interaction of spherical particles with cells and within animals has been studied extensively, but the effects of shape have received little attention. Here we use highly stable, polymer micelle assemblies known as filomicelles to compare the transport and trafficking of flexible filaments with spheres of similar chemistry. In rodents, filomicelles persisted in the circulation up to one week after intravenous injection. This is about ten times longer than their spherical counterparts and is more persistent than any known synthetic nanoparticle. Under fluid flow conditions, spheres and short filomicelles are taken up by cells more readily than longer filaments because the latter are extended by the flow. Preliminary results further demonstrate that filomicelles can effectively deliver the anticancer drug paclitaxel and shrink human-derived tumours in mice. Although these findings show that long-circulating vehicles need not be nanospheres, they also lend insight into possible shape effects of natural filamentous viruses.Keywords
This publication has 43 references indexed in Scilit:
- Oncolytic adenoviruses – selective retargeting to tumor cellsOncogene, 2005
- Highly efficient molecular delivery into mammalian cells using carbon nanotube spearingNature Methods, 2005
- Carbon Nanotubes as Intracellular Protein Transporters: Generality and Biological FunctionalityJournal of the American Chemical Society, 2005
- Internalization and intracellular survival of Mycoplasma pneumoniae by non-phagocytic cellsFEMS Microbiology Letters, 2004
- Internalization and intracellular survival ofMycoplasma pneumoniaeby non-phagocytic cellsFEMS Microbiology Letters, 2004
- Pharmacokinetics of Pegylated Liposomal DoxorubicinClinical Pharmacokinetics, 2003
- Biodegradable Long-Circulating Polymeric NanospheresScience, 1994
- Dynamic light scattering from weakly bending rods: Estimation of the dynamic bending rigidity of the M13 virusBiopolymers, 1991
- Amphipathic polyethyleneglycols effectively prolong the circulation time of liposomesFEBS Letters, 1990
- The pathology of experimental Ebola virus infection in monkeysThe Journal of Pathology, 1978