4.6 Review

Lipid nanovesicles for biomedical applications: 'What is in a name'?

Journal

PROGRESS IN LIPID RESEARCH
Volume 82, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.plipres.2021.101096

Keywords

Vesicles; Drug delivery; Liposomes; Nomenclature; Phospholipids; Non-ionic surfactants; Amphiphilic copolymers

Funding

  1. Sao Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP) [2018/13877-1]
  2. National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq/PIBIT) [306866/2020-0]
  3. CAPES [001]
  4. FAPESP [2018/14375-0, 2014/50928-2]
  5. CNPq [465687/2014-8]

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Vesicles, self-assembled structures formed by single or multiple concentric bilayers surrounding an aqueous core, are widely used in biomedical applications. Liposomes, one of the most well-known types of vesicles, have been extensively modified for drug delivery purposes. The nomenclature of vesicles is often based on changes in lipid composition or other enhanced properties.
Vesicles, generally defined as self-assembled structures formed by single or multiple concentric bilayers that surround an aqueous core, have been widely used for biomedical applications. They can either occur naturally (e. g. exosomes) or be produced artificially and range from the micrometric scale to the nanoscale. One the most well-known vesicle is the liposome, largely employed as a drug delivery nanocarrier. Liposomes have been modified along the years to improve physicochemical and biological features, resulting in long-circulating, ligand-targeted and stimuli-responsive liposomes, among others. In this process, new nomenclatures were reported in an extensive literature. In many instances, the new names suggest the emergence of a new nanocarrier, which have caused confusion as to whether the vesicles are indeed new entities or could simply be considered modified liposomes. Herein, we discussed the extensive nomenclature of vesicles based on the suffix some that are employed for drug delivery and composed of various types and proportions of lipids and others amphiphilic compounds. New names have most often been selected based on changes of vesicle lipid composition, but the payload, structural complexity (e.g. multicompartment) and new/improved proprieties (e.g. elasticity) have also inspired new vesicle names. Based on this discussion, we suggested a rational classification for vesicles.

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