polymersomelike
Polymersomelike is a descriptor used in materials science and nanomedicine to refer to systems that resemble polymersomes in structure and function. Polymersomes are vesicles formed by amphiphilic block copolymers that self-assemble into a closed bilayer membrane enclosing an aqueous core. Polymersomelike systems share this vesicular topology and a polymeric membrane, but may differ in composition or origin, such as hybrid polymersomes with lipids, or synthetic polymer vesicles designed to mimic natural polymersomes.
Formation and structure: Typically produced by self-assembly of amphiphilic block copolymers in water, yielding a bilayer
Properties: Compared with liposomes made from phospholipids, polymersomelike vesicles often exhibit greater chemical and mechanical stability,
Applications: Drug and gene delivery, imaging, biosensing, and catalysis. They offer advantages in stability, shelf life,
Limitations and outlook: Challenges include scalable manufacturing, reproducibility, potential toxicity of synthetic polymers, and biodegradability depending