Chenjie
Xu
a,
Yu Shrike
Zhang
b,
Sylvie
Begin
c and
Nguyễn Thị Kim
Thanh
*de
aDepartment of Biomedical Engineering, City University of Hong Kong, 83 Tat Chee Avenue, Kowloon, Hong Kong SAR, China
bDivision of Engineering in Medicine, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA
cStrasbourg Institute of Physics and Chemistry of Materials, University of Strasbourg, 67034 Strasbourg cedex, France
dBiophysics Group, Department of Physics & Astronomy, University College London, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT, UK
eUCL Healthcare Biomagnetics and Nanomaterials Laboratories, 21 Albemarle Street, London W1S 4BS, UK. E-mail: ntk.thanh@ucl.ac.uk
This collection of reviews, minireviews, communications and research articles covers the rational design and syntheses of optical, electrical, magnetic and hybrid multifunctional nanomaterials for biomedical applications (e.g., diagnostics, therapies, drug delivery, theranostics, biosensing and regenerative medicine). Indeed, some nanoparticles, such as iron oxide, gold and carbon-based materials, are able to provide both therapy and imaging modes. Gold nanoparticles can be used as biosensors due to their surface plasmon resonance properties. Hydrogels, liposomes, capsules or polymeric nanoparticles may encapsulate active ingredients, drugs or even nanoparticles. From the nanomaterial perspective, we can roughly group them into inorganic, organic and biological nanomaterials.
Inorganic nanomaterials include mesoporous nanomaterials (silica, carbon etc.) and oxide, metallic, carbon-based and upconverting nanoparticles, which display high surface specific areas with optical, magnetic and electronic properties. Notably, T1 iron oxide nanoparticles can be fabricated as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contrast agents, a paradigm shift from potentially toxic gadolinium. The deep studies of differently shaped magnetic nanoparticles will help harness their full potentials. The stakes are the control of their size, shape and composition but also their combination to enhance their multifunctionality and, finally, their functionalization to provide good biocompatibility, biodistribution and possibly targeting efficiency. Notably, beside magnetic hyperthermia treatment, photothermal and photodynamic therapy have made significant advances with multifunctional carbon dots, composite enzyme nanogels, anthracene crosslinked nanocomposites and the rapid eradication of bacterial biofilms.
Organic/biological nanomaterials include cell-derived vesicles, lipid nanoparticles, polymer nanoparticles, dendrimers, amino acid-assembled nanoparticles, nucleic acid nanoparticles, hydrogel nanoparticles, etc. The most exciting notion also lies here in the combined usage of different materials to address different practical needs. A major challenge in nanomedicine is to design targeted nanoplatforms that allow diagnosis, therapy, and follow-up by imaging (theranostics) adapted to each patient and disease. For example, van der Ven et al. develop an injectable hydrogel system that delivers gold nanoparticle–miRNA drug complexes for the treatment of heart diseases. Besides the creation of new functional nanomaterials, we are also excited to see researchers further link their innovations with the actual needs of translational medicine, such as a nanoclay-containing hydrogel to promote muscle proliferation and differentiation.
There are many other topic areas that are worthy of inclusion but were omitted due to space restrictions. As guest editors of this themed collection, we would like to thank all of the authors for the high quality of their contributions. Furthermore, we would like to thank the editorial staff from Nanoscale for their support, as well as our reviewers. It is our hope that researchers in chemistry, biology, physics, materials, medicine and beyond will enjoy reading these articles and use them in the next generation of nanomaterials for medical applications.
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