Engineering of biomolecules for sensing and imaging applications.
A review. Biomols. such as peptides, oligonucleotides and oligosaccharides are emerging tools for bioimaging applications due to their availability, versatility, biocompatibility and propensity to interact effectively and selectively with biol. targets. However, unlike macromols. such as proteins, their inherent conformational flexibility combined with the limited no. of interactions they can establish with their target severely limits their potential for applications as imaging probes and/or pharmaceuticals. We review herein two prominent mol. engineering strategies - conformational restriction and multivalency - that have been successfully and widely applied to peptides, oligonucleotides and oligosaccharides in order to enhance their binding affinity and selectivity. We shall highlight the applications of these nanoconstructs in targeted delivery and bioimaging. Finally we discuss the potential for dynamic biomol.-based systems where mol. recognition is controlled by a physicochem. effector. [on SciFinder(R)]
Références
- Titre
- Engineering of biomolecules for sensing and imaging applications.
- Type de publication
- Article de revue
- Année de publication
- 2013
- Auteurs
- Ulrich, S, Dumy Pascal, Boturyn Didier, and Renaudet Olivier
- Revue
- J. Drug Deliv. Sci. Technol.
- Volume
- 23
- Pagination
- 5–15
- ISSN
- 1773-2247
Soumis le 12 avril 2018