4.6 Review

Nano-Scale Gene Delivery Systems: Current Technology, Obstacles, and Future Directions

Journal

CURRENT MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 25, Issue 21, Pages 2448-2464

Publisher

BENTHAM SCIENCE PUBL LTD
DOI: 10.2174/0929867325666180108100723

Keywords

Gene delivery; transfection; gene therapy; nanotechnology; nano-gene delivery; biological therapy; biomedicine; nanomedicine

Funding

  1. la Caixa Fellowship Grant for Post-Graduate Studies, la Caixa Banking Foundation, Barcelona, Spain
  2. EPA Cephalosporin Fund [CF289]
  3. EPSRC IAA [D4D00620]
  4. Oxford Martin School

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Within the different applications of nanomedicine currently being developed, nano-gene delivery is appearing as an exciting new technique with the possibility to overcome recognised hurdles and several biological and medical needs. The central component of all delivery systems is the requirement for the delivery of genetic material into cells, and for them to eventually reside in the nucleus where their desired function will be exposed. However, genetic material does not passively enter cells; thus, a delivery system is necessary. The emerging field of nano-gene delivery exploits the use of new materials and the properties that arise at the nanometre-scale to produce delivery vectors that can effectively deliver genetic material into a variety of different types of cells. The novel physicochemical properties of the new delivery vectors can be used to address the current challenges existing in nucleic acid delivery in vitro and in vivo. While there is a growing interest in nanostructure-based gene delivery, the field is still in its infancy, and there is yet much to discover about nanostructures and their physicochemical properties in a biological context. We carried out an organised and focused search of bibliographic databases. Our results suggest that despite new breakthroughs in nanostructure synthesis and advanced characterization techniques, we still face many barriers in producing highly efficient and non-toxic delivery systems. In this review, we overview the types of systems currently used for clinical and biomedical research applications along with their advantages and disadvantages, as well as discussing barriers that arise from nano-scale interactions with biological material. In conclusion, we hope that by bringing the far reaching multidisciplinary nature of nano-gene delivery to light, new targeted nanotechnology-bases strategies are developed to overcome the major challenges covered in this review.

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