4.8 Review

Protein-Mimicking Nanoparticles in Biosystems

Journal

ADVANCED MATERIALS
Volume 34, Issue 37, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adma.202201562

Keywords

fluorescent protein mimics; nanozymes; protein scaffold mimics; protein; DNA binding nanoparticles; protein-mimicking nanoparticles

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [32171371, 21834007, 82001947, 21991134, 9195310071]
  2. National Key R&D Program of China [2021YFF0701800]
  3. Major Science and Technology Innovation Program of Shanghai Municipal Education Commission [2019-01-0700-01-E00059, 19JC1410300]
  4. open research program of National Facility for Translational Medicine (Shanghai) [TMSK-2021-204]
  5. innovative research team of high-level local universities in Shanghai

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Nanoparticles with protein-mimicking capabilities have a wide range of applications in biology and biomedicine, offering innovative strategies to mimic protein functions and provide additional functionalities.
Proteins are essential elements for almost all life activities. The emergence of nanotechnology offers innovative strategies to create a diversity of nanoparticles (NPs) with intrinsic capacities of mimicking the functions of proteins. These artificial mimics are produced in a cost-efficient and controllable manner, with their protein-mimicking performances comparable or superior to those of natural proteins. Moreover, they can be endowed with additional functionalities that are absent in natural proteins, such as cargo loading, active targeting, membrane penetrating, and multistimuli responding. Therefore, protein-mimicking NPs have been utilized more and more often in biosystems for a wide range of applications including detection, imaging, diagnosis, and therapy. To highlight recent progress in this broad field, herein, representative protein-mimicking NPs that fall into one of the four distinct categories are summarized: mimics of enzymes (nanozymes), mimics of fluorescent proteins, NPs with high affinity binding to specific proteins or DNA sequences, and mimics of protein scaffolds. This review covers their subclassifications, characteristic features, functioning mechanisms, as well as the extensive exploitation of their great potential for biological and biomedical purposes. Finally, the challenges and prospects in future development of protein-mimicking NPs are discussed.

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