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25 Nanobiotechnology – A Green Solution
role here. “Intelligent nanocoatings” developed can help to indicate presence
of contaminations during the storage of food items. Active packaging contains
specific molecules that create a passive barrier to oxidative, photolytic, hydrolytic
deteoriations and also release antioxidants and antimicrobials thus ensuring dual
stability [16, 19–25].
25.3.2
Health, Medicine, Drug Delivery, and Pharmaceuticals
Green nanotechnology provides a cost-effective, rapid technology in drug delivery,
diagnostics, new drug development strategies, etc. Nanotechnologies provide
options for advanced medical treatment like repairing of DNA and cellular damage,
customized drug delivery. Green nanotechnology provides the basis of sustainable
health treatment. This has given rise to “nanomedicine” that employs the science
and technology of “nano” in the field of biomedicine. Nanosensors are used for the
purpose of medical diagnosis. Pharmaceutics and green nanotechnology combined
hands to develop “nanorobots.” Patients can ingest these programmed nanorobots
in drinks and beverages. These nanorobots can perform sophisticated, most delicate
surgeries not leaving any scar marks as like the conventional surgical procedure.
Nanorobots also find great applications in cosmetic surgeries and can aid in gene
manipulation altering the physical appearance of individuals as per personalized
demands. Nanoparticle-based drug delivery has developed a range of formulations,
e.g. nanoemulsions, micelles, liposomes, dendrimers, niosomes, and solid lipid
nanoparticles, polymeric nanoparticles play a crucial role in sustained release drug
delivery systems [16, 26–31].
Although the immense potency of phytomedicine is evidence-based, the phar-
maceutical companies are still hesitant to invest capital in screening of novel
chemical entities of natural origin. But plant secondary metabolites have exhibited
a wide range of pharmacological actions (antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, antidi-
abetic, antimicrobial, etc.) as well as preventive and curative potentials against
several communicable, noncommunicable, infectious diseases, and life-threatening
diseases like cancer. The abovementioned nanoparticle-based formulations find
extensive uses in phytoformulation research. Pharmaceutical companies have
their own research wings focused on nano-based drug delivery systems. Different
encapsulation technologies are being applied in formulating the nano scale devices
for delivery of therapeutic entities and other chemical components. Metallic
nanoparticles, e.g. AgNPs encapsulating different herbal bioactives and synthetic
drugs are available. AgNPs have potential antimicrobial effects as silver ions are
toxic to microbes. In vitro cell culture study results have shown that AgNP have
potential cytotoxic effects against leukemia cells and a number of other cancerous
cell lines, viz. hepatic carcinoma cell lines, squamous cell lung carcinoma cells,
human alveolar cell line, melanoma cell line, etc. [20, 27, 29, 30]. Gold nanoparti-
cles (AuNPs) are used not only for the delivery of therapeutics but also in genetic
engineering, as biosensors, delivery of antibacterials, in hyperthermia therapy,
etc. Herbal bioactive-loaded nanoparticles have been formulated where either the
standardized plant extract have been encapsulated or isolated plant secondary