Bacterial nanotechnology as a paradigm in targeted cancer therapeutic delivery and immunotherapy
Ahmad Gholami, Milad Mohkam, Saeede Soleimanian, Mohammad Sadraeian, Antonio Lauto

TL;DR
This review explores how bacteria and their components can be used in nanotechnology to improve cancer treatments and boost the immune system.
Contribution
The paper introduces bacterial nanotechnology as a novel and multifunctional platform for targeted cancer therapy and immunotherapy.
Findings
Bacteria can act as living carriers for delivering therapeutic agents to cancer cells.
Bacterial components can stimulate the immune system to fight tumors.
Bacteria-derived nano-drugs can synergize with technologies like CRISPR-Cas for enhanced cancer treatment.
Abstract
Cancer, a multifaceted and diverse ailment, presents formidable obstacles to traditional treatment modalities. Nanotechnology presents novel prospects for surmounting these challenges through its capacity to facilitate meticulous and regulated administration of therapeutic agents to malignant cells while concurrently modulating the immune system to combat neoplasms. Bacteria and their derivatives have emerged as highly versatile and multifunctional platforms for cancer nanotherapy within the realm of nanomaterials. This comprehensive review delves into the multifaceted and groundbreaking implementations of bacterial nanotechnology within cancer therapy. This review encompasses four primary facets: the utilization of bacteria as living conveyors of medicinal substances, the employment of bacterial components as agents that stimulate the immune system, the deployment of bacterial vectors…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsLiterary and Cultural Studies · Cultural and Mythological Studies · Historical and Modern Theater Studies
