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      Coating Matters: Review on Colloidal Stability of Nanoparticles with Biocompatible Coatings in Biological Media, Living Cells and 
Organisms

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          Abstract

          Abstract: Within the last two decades, the field of nanomedicine has not developed as successfully as has widely been hoped for. The main reason for this is the immense complexity of the biological systems, including the physico-chemical properties of the biological fluids as well as the biochemistry and the physiology of living systems. The nanoparticles’ physico-chemical properties are also highly important. These differ profoundly from those of freshly synthesized particles when applied in biological/living systems as recent research in this field reveals. The physico-chemical properties of nanoparticles are predefined by their structural and functional design (core and coating material) and are highly affected by their interaction with the environment (temperature, pH, salt, proteins, cells). Since the coating material is the first part of the particle to come in contact with the environment, it does not only provide biocompatibility, but also defines the behavior (e.g. colloidal stability) and the fate (degradation, excretion, accumulation) of nanoparticles in the living systems. Hence, the coating matters, particularly for a nanoparticle system for biomedical applications, which has to fulfill its task in the complex environment of biological fluids, cells and organisms. In this review, we evaluate the performance of different coating materials for nanoparticles concerning their ability to provide colloidal stability in biological media and living systems.

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              The use of nanocrystals in biological detection.

              In the coming decade, the ability to sense and detect the state of biological systems and living organisms optically, electrically and magnetically will be radically transformed by developments in materials physics and chemistry. The emerging ability to control the patterns of matter on the nanometer length scale can be expected to lead to entirely new types of biological sensors. These new systems will be capable of sensing at the single-molecule level in living cells, and capable of parallel integration for detection of multiple signals, enabling a diversity of simultaneous experiments, as well as better crosschecks and controls.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Curr Med Chem
                Curr. Med. Chem
                CMC
                Current Medicinal Chemistry
                Bentham Science Publishers
                0929-8673
                1875-533X
                October 2019
                October 2019
                : 25
                : 35
                : 4556-4586
                Affiliations
                Department of Nanostructured Materials, Leibniz-Institut für Polymerforschung Dresden, Dresden, , Germany; Physical Chemistry of Polymer Materials, Technische Universität Dresden , D-01062, Dresden , Germany; Department of Physical Chemistry II, University of Bayreuth , 95447, Bayreuth , Germany; Institute of Building Materials (IfB), ETH Zurich, 8093, Zurich , Switzerland; Swiss Wood Solutions AG, Stefano-Franscini-Platz 3, 8093, , Zurich , Switzerland
                Author notes
                [* ]Address correspondence to these authors at the Department of Nanostructured Materials, Leibniz-Institut für Polymerforschung Dresden, Dresden, Germany and Department of Physical Chemistry II, University of Bayreuth, 95447 Bayreuth, Germany;E-mails: schubert-jonas@ 123456ipfdd.de ; chananam@ 123456ethz.ch
                Article
                CMC-25-4556
                10.2174/0929867325666180601101859
                7040520
                29852857
                e8ebc076-9784-478e-a35c-39ef20389333
                © 2019 Bentham Science Publishers

                This is an open access article licensed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial 4.0 International Public License (CC BY-NC 4.0) ( https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/legalcode), which permits unrestricted, non-commercial use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the work is properly cited.

                History
                : 19 December 2016
                : 13 March 2017
                : 15 May 2017
                Categories
                Article

                Pharmaceutical chemistry
                nanoparticles,coating materials,colloidal stability,biological media,biopolymers,polymeric coatings,protein corona

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