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platelettargeting

Platelettargeting, in a biomedical context, refers to strategies that direct therapeutic or diagnostic agents to platelets themselves or to sites where platelets accumulate. The goal is to exploit platelets’ natural biology—their circulation, rapid recruitment to injured or diseased tissue, and diverse surface receptors—to improve targeting, efficacy, and safety of treatments or imaging.

Platelets are small, anucleate blood cells that participate in hemostasis and wound healing. They express adhesion

Approaches to platelet targeting include: using platelets as drug carriers by loading them with therapeutics; engineering

Applications span oncology, where targeting the tumor vasculature and circulating tumor cells is explored; vascular injury

receptors
such
as
GPIb-IX-V,
GPVI,
and
GPIIb/IIIa,
enabling
interactions
with
von
Willebrand
factor,
collagen,
fibrinogen,
and
activated
endothelium.
Upon
activation,
they
release
cargo
and
form
aggregates,
contributing
to
clot
formation
and
inflammatory
signaling.
Tumor
vessels
and
inflammatory
lesions
can
recruit
platelets,
making
platelet-rich
microenvironments
attractive
targets
for
drug
delivery
and
disease
imaging.
nanoparticles
with
platelet
membranes
or
platelet-binding
ligands
to
confer
platelet-like
homing;
and
decorating
carriers
with
platelet-targeting
moieties
such
as
antibodies,
aptamers,
or
peptides
against
P-selectin,
GPVI,
or
GPIIb/IIIa
to
enhance
adhesion
to
activated
platelets
or
platelet-rich
lesions.
Platelet-derived
extracellular
vesicles
are
also
explored
as
natural
delivery
vehicles,
and
some
strategies
use
platelet
membranes
to
cloak
nanoparticles
for
immune
evasion
and
targeted
delivery.
and
bleeding
disorders;
inflammatory
diseases;
and
diagnostic
imaging
to
visualize
platelet-rich
pathologies.
Challenges
include
safety
concerns
such
as
thrombosis
and
bleeding
risk,
potential
immunogenicity,
manufacturing
and
standardization,
and
regulatory
hurdles.
Most
work
remains
in
preclinical
stages,
with
ongoing
efforts
to
translate
platelet-targeting
concepts
into
clinical
practice.
See
also
platelet-based
therapy
and
targeted
drug
delivery.