Lipid-based polymeric biomaterial-mediated ex vivo natural killer cell surface engineeringopen access
- Authors
- Park, Jaewon; Noh, Kyung Mu; Kim, Kyobum
- Issue Date
- Aug-2025
- Publisher
- Royal Society of Chemistry
- Keywords
- Lipid; Antigens; Biomaterials; Cell Engineering; Cell Membranes; Cytology; Diseases; Molecular Biology; Cancer Cells; Cell Surface Engineering; Cell-based; Ex-vivo; Genetic Modifications; Immunological Synapse; Natural Killer Cells; Polymeric Biomaterials; Solid Tumors; Therapeutic Efficacy; Ligands; Tumors; Biomaterial; Chimeric Antigen Receptor; Lipid; Cancer Immunotherapy; Cell Surface; Cellular Immunotherapy; Chimeric Antigen Receptor Natural Killer Cell Immunotherapy; Cytotoxicity; Ex Vivo Study; Genetic Modification; Genetic Transfection; Human; Human Cell; Immunological Synapse; Natural Killer Cell; Pharmaceutics; Polymerization; Review; Solid Tumor
- Citation
- Biomaterials Science, v.13, no.17, pp 4576 - 4596
- Pages
- 21
- Indexed
- SCIE
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- Biomaterials Science
- Volume
- 13
- Number
- 17
- Start Page
- 4576
- End Page
- 4596
- URI
- https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/58761
- DOI
- 10.1039/d5bm00692a
- ISSN
- 2047-4830
2047-4849
- Abstract
- Natural killer (NK) cell-based immunotherapy has gained significant attention due to its ability to selectively recognize and eliminate cancer cells through immunological synapse formation while sparing normal cells. However, the therapeutic efficacy of NK cells against solid tumors remains limited, primarily due to insufficient tumor-specific targeting ligands. Although chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-engineered NK cell therapy has been developed to address this challenge, its clinical translation is hindered by challenges like high cost, low transfection efficiency, and concerns associated with genetic modification. As an alternative, biomaterial-based NK cell surface engineering has emerged as a promising strategy to enhance tumor-targeting capabilities, without altering the intrinsic properties of NK cells. In particular, lipid-based polymeric biomaterial platforms enable efficient ligand-receptor interactions, thereby enhancing NK cell-mediated tumor recognition and cytotoxicity. This review highlights recent advances in the lipid-based NK cell surface engineering platform, discussing its advantages over genetic modifications and its potential to improve the efficacy of NK cell-based cancer immunotherapy.
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Collections - College of Engineering > Department of Chemical and Biochemical Engineering > 1. Journal Articles

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