EXPLORING THE NANOCARRIER POTENTIAL OF SURFACE LAYER PROTEINS FROM LACTOBACILLUS SPECIES

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15480824

Authors

  • Ratih Maharani Kusuma Research Center for Applied Microbiology, National Research and Innovation Agency, Cibinong, Indonesia

Keywords:

nanoparticles (NPs), metal NPs/nanocomposites, or as a direct nanocarrier of small molecules. Moreover, SLP

Abstract

Surface layer protein (SLP) is the outboard structure of bacteria which controls their adaptability and adherence to other bacteria and biological surfaces. SLP could maintain its 3D structure and has a self-assembly mechanism, even after being isolated from the host microorganism. This protein is potential to be integrated into drug nanocarriers because it has size in nanometer, protective features, self-assembly capacity, and high compatibility either with biological systems or chemical substances. It has been used as a surface coating for liposomes, emulsomes, polymeric SLP, drug delivery, significantly improved the physicochemical properties of the drug delivery system (higher stability and longer half-nanomedicine, Lactobacillus, life) and synergic bioactivities (increasing intestinal absorption; protecting against the acidic gastric environment; drug carrier. enhancing immune response, antibiofilm, and antibacterial activity). Additionally, the integration of SLP into a drug delivery system is simple and sustainable. In this review, references were searched in Scopus, PubMed and Google Scholar engines by using the terms “surface layer protein,” “SLP,”,“drug carrier,” “drug delivery,” “Lactobacillus,” and “nanomedicine.” To the best of our knowledge, this work is the first review of the applications of the SLP as drug nanocarriers.

Published

2025-05-22

Issue

Section

Articles