“Drug-Free” chitosan nanoparticles as therapeutic for cancer treatment

Chitosan is cancer cytotoxic. It induces apoptosis/necrosis/autophagy and immuno-responses, and mitigates angiogenic and metastasis tendency of cancer cells. The lower molecular weight chitosan induces apoptosis, whereas the higher molecular weight chitosan exerts apoptosis and necrosis. Transformin...

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Published in:Polymer Reviews
Main Author: Iskandar A.; Kim S.-K.; Wong T.W.
Format: Review
Language:English
Published: Taylor and Francis Ltd. 2024
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85187133860&doi=10.1080%2f15583724.2024.2323943&partnerID=40&md5=e716131457292cdc1f14658015b3a424
id 2-s2.0-85187133860
spelling 2-s2.0-85187133860
Iskandar A.; Kim S.-K.; Wong T.W.
“Drug-Free” chitosan nanoparticles as therapeutic for cancer treatment
2024
Polymer Reviews
64
3
10.1080/15583724.2024.2323943
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85187133860&doi=10.1080%2f15583724.2024.2323943&partnerID=40&md5=e716131457292cdc1f14658015b3a424
Chitosan is cancer cytotoxic. It induces apoptosis/necrosis/autophagy and immuno-responses, and mitigates angiogenic and metastasis tendency of cancer cells. The lower molecular weight chitosan induces apoptosis, whereas the higher molecular weight chitosan exerts apoptosis and necrosis. Transforming chitosan into nanoparticles raises its anti-cancer efficacy with mode of cancer cell death governed by particle size to a greater extent than chitosan molecular weight. The larger nanoparticles tend to exert apoptosis. The smaller nanoparticles mediate necrosis. “Drug-free” small nanoparticles constituted of lower molecular weight chitosan are more cytotoxic than those of larger chitosan molecules/particles in vitro and in vivo, with no clear relationship between the deacetylation degree and zeta potential of nanoparticulate chitosan with anti-cancer activity. “Drug-free” chitosan nanoparticles are potentially as viable as the drug-loaded chitosan nanoparticles but with reduced systemic adverse effects. Their anti-cancer efficacy can be modulated through particle dose adjustment with lower risks of harmful effects than drugs and without processing hurdles faced in the development of drug-loaded chitosan nanoparticles such as low aqueous drug solubility, poor drug encapsulation, premature drug release and drug absorption, and drug instability with toxic metabolite formation. © 2024 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
Taylor and Francis Ltd.
15583724
English
Review

author Iskandar A.; Kim S.-K.; Wong T.W.
spellingShingle Iskandar A.; Kim S.-K.; Wong T.W.
“Drug-Free” chitosan nanoparticles as therapeutic for cancer treatment
author_facet Iskandar A.; Kim S.-K.; Wong T.W.
author_sort Iskandar A.; Kim S.-K.; Wong T.W.
title “Drug-Free” chitosan nanoparticles as therapeutic for cancer treatment
title_short “Drug-Free” chitosan nanoparticles as therapeutic for cancer treatment
title_full “Drug-Free” chitosan nanoparticles as therapeutic for cancer treatment
title_fullStr “Drug-Free” chitosan nanoparticles as therapeutic for cancer treatment
title_full_unstemmed “Drug-Free” chitosan nanoparticles as therapeutic for cancer treatment
title_sort “Drug-Free” chitosan nanoparticles as therapeutic for cancer treatment
publishDate 2024
container_title Polymer Reviews
container_volume 64
container_issue 3
doi_str_mv 10.1080/15583724.2024.2323943
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85187133860&doi=10.1080%2f15583724.2024.2323943&partnerID=40&md5=e716131457292cdc1f14658015b3a424
description Chitosan is cancer cytotoxic. It induces apoptosis/necrosis/autophagy and immuno-responses, and mitigates angiogenic and metastasis tendency of cancer cells. The lower molecular weight chitosan induces apoptosis, whereas the higher molecular weight chitosan exerts apoptosis and necrosis. Transforming chitosan into nanoparticles raises its anti-cancer efficacy with mode of cancer cell death governed by particle size to a greater extent than chitosan molecular weight. The larger nanoparticles tend to exert apoptosis. The smaller nanoparticles mediate necrosis. “Drug-free” small nanoparticles constituted of lower molecular weight chitosan are more cytotoxic than those of larger chitosan molecules/particles in vitro and in vivo, with no clear relationship between the deacetylation degree and zeta potential of nanoparticulate chitosan with anti-cancer activity. “Drug-free” chitosan nanoparticles are potentially as viable as the drug-loaded chitosan nanoparticles but with reduced systemic adverse effects. Their anti-cancer efficacy can be modulated through particle dose adjustment with lower risks of harmful effects than drugs and without processing hurdles faced in the development of drug-loaded chitosan nanoparticles such as low aqueous drug solubility, poor drug encapsulation, premature drug release and drug absorption, and drug instability with toxic metabolite formation. © 2024 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
publisher Taylor and Francis Ltd.
issn 15583724
language English
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