Coiled-coil drug delivery
Coiled coil drug delivery system / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Coiled-coil drug delivery systems refer to drug delivery systems utilizing coiled-coil motifs capable of delivering disease-treating therapies, imaging agents, and vaccines to patients systemically or specifically. These systems are a form of peptide therapeutics and are capable of being engineered and finely tuned into different types of drug delivery vehicles (such as liposomes, nanoparticle drug carriers, polymer hybrid drug carriers, micelles, etc.) based on the specific application required. The goal of a coiled-coil drug delivery system is to deliver cargo such as medication, imaging agents, biological molecules, or vaccines efficiently and specifically, in order to maximize the therapeutic efficacy and minimize unwanted side effects. This is achieved through fine-tuning the factors affecting the coiled coil’s oligomerization, resulting in modular systems that are highly specific for the intended application.
Coiled-coil motifs make up 10% of all protein sequences,[1] and are utilized naturally by various proteins in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes to achieve diverse cellular functions. Coupled with the simple helical structure of coiled coils which has been widely studied and reported on in literature, engineered coiled coil drug delivery systems are capable of improving drug pharmacokinetics, reducing unintentional toxicity during delivery, delivering drugs in a specific manner, controlling cargo release, and maintaining high stability through transport in the body.