Application of Nanomedicine in Immunotherapy: Recent Advances and Prospects, 2nd Edition

A special issue of Pharmaceutics (ISSN 1999-4923). This special issue belongs to the section "Nanomedicine and Nanotechnology".

Deadline for manuscript submissions: 30 May 2024 | Viewed by 689

Special Issue Editors


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Guest Editor
Laboratory of Nanobiotechnology, Intitute of Biological Sciences, University of Brasília, Brasília 70910-900, Brazil
Interests: nanomedicine; lipid nanocarriers; oral administration; metastasis prevention
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Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

Nanomedicine is a special area of medicine focused on the application of nanoparticles and drug nanocarriers to treat a wide variety of diseases, including cancer, infections, and auto-immune disorders. In the last decade, several original articles presented interesting results connecting these nanotechnologies with the activation of the immune system against different diseases. Probably the most prominent example of this was the RNA vaccines against COVID-19 when lipid nanoparticles were used to protect and deliver the nucleotides to the target cells. Of course, this is not the single application referred to as nanomedicine, and several others examples aiming at cancer therapy are also available in the literature. In this application, nanoparticles can be used to modulate the immune response, improving the oncological therapies. Thus, the aim of this Special Issue is to invite authors interested in the most recent science and technology applications of nanotechnology in immunotherapies against different diseases, including cancer, infections, and auto-immune conditions. We welcome submissions of original research, as well as review articles related to nanomedicine and immunological activation.

Dr. João Paulo Figueiró Longo
Dr. Luis Alexandre Muehlmann
Guest Editors

Manuscript Submission Information

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Keywords

  • nanomedicine
  • immunotherapy
  • immune system
  • immune triggering
  • immune memory
  • innovation

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Published Papers (1 paper)

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Review

39 pages, 4541 KiB  
Review
Nonintuitive Immunogenicity and Plasticity of Alpha-Synuclein Conformers: A Paradigm for Smart Delivery of Neuro-Immunotherapeutics
by Amos Abioye, Damilare Akintade, James Mitchell, Simisade Olorode and Adeboye Adejare
Pharmaceutics 2024, 16(5), 609; https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics16050609 - 30 Apr 2024
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Abstract
Despite the extensive research successes and continuous developments in modern medicine in terms of diagnosis, prevention, and treatment, the lack of clinically useful disease-modifying drugs or immunotherapeutic agents that can successfully treat or prevent neurodegenerative diseases is an ongoing challenge. To date, only [...] Read more.
Despite the extensive research successes and continuous developments in modern medicine in terms of diagnosis, prevention, and treatment, the lack of clinically useful disease-modifying drugs or immunotherapeutic agents that can successfully treat or prevent neurodegenerative diseases is an ongoing challenge. To date, only one of the 244 drugs in clinical trials for the treatment of neurodegenerative diseases has been approved in the past decade, indicating a failure rate of 99.6%. In corollary, the approved monoclonal antibody did not demonstrate significant cognitive benefits. Thus, the prevalence of neurodegenerative diseases is increasing rapidly. Therefore, there is an urgent need for creative approaches to identifying and testing biomarkers for better diagnosis, prevention, and disease-modifying strategies for the treatment of neurodegenerative diseases. Overexpression of the endogenous α-synuclein has been identified as the driving force for the formation of the pathogenic α-synuclein (α-Syn) conformers, resulting in neuroinflammation, hypersensitivity, endogenous homeostatic responses, oxidative dysfunction, and degeneration of dopaminergic neurons in Parkinson’s disease (PD). However, the conformational plasticity of α-Syn proffers that a certain level of α-Syn is essential for the survival of neurons. Thus, it exerts both neuroprotective and neurotoxic (regulatory) functions on neighboring neuronal cells. Furthermore, the aberrant metastable α-Syn conformers may be subtle and difficult to detect but may trigger cellular and molecular events including immune responses. It is well documented in literature that the misfolded α-Syn and its conformers that are released into the extracellular space from damaged or dead neurons trigger the innate and adaptive immune responses in PD. Thus, in this review, we discuss the nonintuitive plasticity and immunogenicity of the α-Syn conformers in the brain immune cells and their physiological and pathological consequences on the neuroimmune responses including neuroinflammation, homeostatic remodeling, and cell-specific interactions that promote neuroprotection in PD. We also critically reviewed the novel strategies for immunotherapeutic delivery interventions in PD pathogenesis including immunotherapeutic targets and potential nanoparticle-based smart drug delivery systems. It is envisioned that a greater understanding of the nonintuitive immunogenicity of aberrant α-Syn conformers in the brain’s microenvironment would provide a platform for identifying valid therapeutic targets and developing smart brain delivery systems for clinically effective disease-modifying immunotherapeutics that can aid in the prevention and treatment of PD in the future. Full article
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