List of contributors xv
1 Introduction to tailor-made biopolymers in drug delivery
applications
Yasir Faraz Abbasi, Parthasarathi Panda, Sanjay Arora, Buddhadev Layek
and Hriday Bera
1.1 Introduction
1.2 Biopolymers from plant and animal kingdom
1.2.1 Polysaccharides
1.2.2 Polypeptides
1.2.3 Polynucleotides
1.3 Chemical modifications of biopolymers
1.3.1 Modification approaches of polysaccharides
1.3.2 Modification approaches of polypeptides
1.4 Tailor-made biopolymers as pharmaceutical excipients
1.5 Conclusion
References
Section 1 Modified biopolymers
2 Thiolated biopolymers in drug delivery and biomedical applications
Custodiana A. Colmenarez Lobo, Mirta L. Fascio and Norma B. D'Accorso
2.1 Introduction
2.2 Thiolated biopolymers in drug delivery applications
2.3 Thiolated biopolymers in biomedical applications
2.3.1 Medicinal applications
2.3.2 Diagnosis
2.3.3 Regenerative medicine
2.4 Conclusion and future perspectives
Acknowledgments
References
3 Smart biopolymers for controlled drug delivery applications
Sanjay Arora, Riddhi Trivedi, Richard N.L. Lamptey, Bivek Chaulagain,
Buddhadev Layek and Jagdish Singh
3.1 Introduction
3.2 Different types of smart biopolymers
3.2.1 Thermosensitive smart polymers
3.2.2 pH-sensitive smart polymers
3.2.3 Light-sensitive smart polymers
3.2.4 Phase-sensitive smart polymers
3.2.5 Bioresponsive smart polymers
3.3 Conclusion
References
4 Alginate-based systems for protein and peptide delivery
Paramita Paul, Gouranga Nandi, Mohammed A. Abosheasha and
Hriday Bera
4.1 Introduction
4.2 Alginate: sources, physicochemical and biological properties
4.2.1 Sources of alginates
4.2.2 Physicochemical properties
4.2.3 Biological properties
4.3 Modifications of alginate for protein and peptide delivery
4.3.1 Covalent chemical modifications
4.3.2 Polyelectrolyte complexes
4.4 Alginate-based systems for protein and peptide delivery
4.4.1 Model protein delivery
4.4.2 Insulin delivery
4.4.3 Angiogenic factor delivery
4.4.4 Chemokine delivery
4.4.5 Bone morphogenetic protein delivery
4.5 Conclusion
References
5 Chitosan-based polyelectrolyte complexes in biomedical
applications
Buddhadev Layek, Surajit Das and Shubhajit Paul
5.1 Introduction
5.2 Polyelectrolyte complexes
5.2.1 Mechanism of polyelectrolyte complexes formation
5.2.2 Preparation of PECs and factors influencing the formation
and stability of PECs
5.3 Applications of chitosan-based polyelectrolyte complexes
5.3.1 Drug delivery
5.3.2 Gene delivery
5.3.3 Tissue engineering
5.4 Conclusion
References
6 Tailor-made cyclodextrin-based nanomaterials as drug carriers
Kazi Ali, Pradyot Roy, Arindam Maity and Pranabesh Chakraborty
6.1 Introduction
6.1.1 History
6.1.2 Source of cyclodextrins
6.1.3 Types and structure of cyclodextrins
6.1.4 Properties of cyclodextrins
6.1.5 Inclusion complex formation
6.2 Modification of cyclodextrins
6.2.1 Principle and chemistry of cyclodextrin modification
6.2.2 Characterization of modified cyclodextrins
6.3 Cyclodextrin-based nanomaterials
6.3.1 Preparation of nanomaterials from cyclodextrins and
applications
6.3.2 Different cyclodextrin-based nanomaterials
6.4 Pharmaceutical and biomedical applications of tailor-made
CD-based nanomaterials
6.5 Conclusion and future prospects
References
Further reading
Section 2 Biopolymeric conjugates/composites
7 Biopolymer_metal oxide composites in biomedical
applications
Yasir Faraz Abbasi and Hriday Bera
7.1 Introduction
7.2 Applications of biopolymer_metal oxide composites
7.2.1 Drug delivery
7.2.2 Anticancer, antioxidant, and antimicrobial activities
7.2.3 Wound healing and tissue engineering
7.2.4 Biosensors, bioimaging, and diagnostics
7.3 Conclusion
References
8 Biopolymer_drug conjugates as biomaterials
Haifei Guo, Yasir Faraz Abbasi, Hriday Bera and Mingshi Yang
8.1 Introduction
8.2 Biopolymer_drug conjugates
8.2.1 Polysaccharide-drug conjugates
8.2.2 Polypeptide_drug conjugates
8.