Nano-Antimicrobial Peptide Review (May 19): Nanoparticle Delivery Framed as Route Past Toxicity, Instability, and Manufacturing Barriers to AMP Clinical Translation
A review published May 19 in Drug Delivery and Translational Research analyzed nano-antimicrobial peptides (nano-AMPs) — antimicrobial peptides packaged into nanoparticle delivery systems — as a strategy to overcome the three barriers that have kept AMPs out of the clinic despite decades of promise: systemic toxicity, proteolytic instability, and manufacturing cost. The review focuses on activity against multidrug-resistant Gram-negative bacteria, the hardest antimicrobial-resistance target where the conventional-antibiotic pipeline is thinnest. Nanoparticle encapsulation can shield AMPs from protease degradation, reduce off-target toxicity by controlling release, and improve tissue targeting. The piece joins the broader 2026 AMP research wave — AI-designed peptides (ProteoGPT, CAMPER), generative-AI discovery in Nature Microbiology, and ancient-microbiome AMP mining — that is collectively maturing the antimicrobial peptide field toward clinical viability against the ESKAPE pathogens responsible for most drug-resistant infections.