Transduction Methods for Cytosolic Delivery of Proteins and Bioconjugates into Living Cells.

Fiche publication


Date publication

mars 2018

Journal

Advanced healthcare materials

Auteurs

Membres identifiés du Cancéropôle Est :
Dr ZUBER Guy


Tous les auteurs :
Chiper M, Niederreither K, Zuber G

Résumé

The human organism and its constituting cells rely on interplay between multiple proteins exerting specific functions. Progress in molecular biotechnologies has facilitated the production of recombinant proteins. When administrated to patients, recombinant proteins can provide important healthcare benefits. To date, most therapeutic proteins must act from the extracellular environment, with their targets being secreted modulators or extracellular receptors. This is because proteins cannot passively diffuse across the plasma membrane into the cytosol. To expand the scope of action of proteins for cytosolic targets (representing more than 40% of the genome) effective methods assisting protein cytosolic entry are being developed. To date, direct protein delivery is extremely tedious and inefficient in cultured cells, even more so in animal models of pathology. Novel techniques are changing this limitation, as recently developed in vitro methods can robustly convey large amount of proteins into cell cultures. Moreover, advances in protein formulation or protein conjugates are slowly, but surely demonstrating efficiency for targeted cytosolic entry of functional protein in vivo in tumor xenograft models. In this review, various methods and recently developed techniques for protein transport into cells are summarized. They are put into perspective to address the challenges encountered during delivery.

Mots clés

cytosolic delivery, intracellular delivery, protein carriers, protein transport, transduction

Référence

Adv Healthc Mater. 2018 Mar;7(6):e1701040