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The nuclear pore complex is a nanoscale assembly that achieves shuttle-cargo transport of biomolecules: a certain cargo molecule can only pass the barrier if it is attached to a shuttle molecule. In this review we summarize the most important efforts aiming to reproduce this feature in artificial settings. This can be achieved by solid state nanopores that have been functionalized with the most important proteins found in the biological system. Alternatively, the nanopores are chemically modified with synthetic polymers. However, only a few studies have demonstrated a shuttle-cargo transport mechanism and due to cargo leakage, the selectivity is not comparable to that of the biological system. Other recent approaches are based on DNA origami, though biomolecule transport has not yet been studied with these. The highest selectivity has been achieved with macroscopic gels, but they are yet to be scaled down to nano-dimensions. It is concluded that although several interesting studies exist, we are still far from achieving selective and efficient artificial shuttle-cargo transport of biomolecules. Besides being of fundamental interest, such a system could be potentially useful in bioanalytical devices.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2na00389a | DOI Listing |
Nanoscale
February 2024
Department of Chemistry, The University of Texas at Austin, 105 E. 24th St, Austin, TX 78712, USA.
Access to the brain is restricted by the low permeability of the blood-brain barrier (BBB), greatly hampering modern drug delivery efforts. A promising approach to overcome this boundary is to utilize biomacromolecules (peptides, nucleic acids, carbohydrates) as targeting ligands on nanoscale delivery vehicles to shuttle cargo across the BBB. In this mini-review, we highlight the most recent approaches for crossing the BBB using synthetic nanoscale constructs decorated with members of these general classes of biomacromolecules to safely and selectively deliver therapeutic materials to the brain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTrends Cell Biol
May 2024
Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Department of Cell Biology, Harvard Medical School, 240 Longwood Avenue, Boston, MA 02115, USA. Electronic address:
Peroxisomes are vital metabolic organelles that import their lumenal (matrix) enzymes from the cytosol using mobile receptors. Surprisingly, the receptors can even import folded proteins, but the underlying mechanism has been a mystery. Recent results reveal how import receptors shuttle cargo into peroxisomes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSoft Matter
June 2023
School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA 30318, USA.
Using Langevin dynamics simulations, we study a system of a transversely propelling polymer and passive Brownian particles. We consider a polymer whose monomers experience a constant propulsion force perpendicular to the local tangents, surrounded by passive particles undergoing thermal fluctuations in two dimensions. We demonstrate that the sideways propelling polymer can act as a sweeper to collect the passive Brownian particles, mimicking a shuttle-cargo system.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNanoscale Adv
November 2022
Department of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Chalmers University of Technology 41296 Gothenburg Sweden
The nuclear pore complex is a nanoscale assembly that achieves shuttle-cargo transport of biomolecules: a certain cargo molecule can only pass the barrier if it is attached to a shuttle molecule. In this review we summarize the most important efforts aiming to reproduce this feature in artificial settings. This can be achieved by solid state nanopores that have been functionalized with the most important proteins found in the biological system.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOxid Med Cell Longev
January 2022
Xiyuan Hospital, China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences, Beijing, China.
Exosomes are a type of extracellular vesicles secreted by almost all kinds of mammalian cells that shuttle "cargo" from one cell to another, indicative of its role in cell-to-cell transportation. Interestingly, exosomes are known to undergo alterations or serve as a pathway in multiple diseases, including neurodegenerative diseases. In the central nervous system (CNS), exosomes originating from neurons or glia cells contribute to or inhibit the progression of CNS-related diseases in special ways.
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