Publication | Open Access
Unlocking the Mitochondria for Nanomedicine-based Treatments: Overcoming Biological Barriers, Improving Designs, and Selecting Verification Techniques
25
Citations
195
References
2024
Year
NanoparticlesNanotherapeuticsEngineeringOvercoming Biological BarriersBiomedical EngineeringChemical BiologyNanomedicineMitochondrial BiogenesisRational DesignVerification TechniquesBiochemistryMitochondrial DynamicNanobiotechnologyNanomedicine-based TreatmentsBiological RoutesMitochondrial FunctionMitochondrial MedicineNano-drug DeliveryMedicineOrganelle DynamicDrug Discovery
Enhanced targeting approaches will support the treatment of diseases associated with dysfunctional mitochondria, which play critical roles in energy generation and cell survival. Obstacles to mitochondria-specific targeting include the presence of distinct biological barriers and the need to pass through (or avoid) various cell internalization mechanisms. A range of studies have reported the design of mitochondrially-targeted nanomedicines that navigate the complex routes required to influence mitochondrial function; nonetheless, a significant journey lies ahead before mitochondrially-targeted nanomedicines become suitable for clinical use. Moving swiftly forward will require safety studies, in vivo assays confirming effectiveness, and methodologies to validate mitochondria-targeted nanomedicines' subcellular location/activity. From a nanomedicine standpoint, we describe the biological routes involved (from administration to arrival within the mitochondria), the features influencing rational design, and the techniques used to identify/validate successful targeting. Overall, rationally-designed mitochondria-targeted-based nanomedicines hold great promise for precise subcellular therapeutic delivery.
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