| Literature DB >> 29346275 |
Faisal Raza1, Hajra Zafar2, Ying Zhu3, Yuan Ren4, Aftab -Ullah5, Asif Ullah Khan6, Xinyi He7, Han Han8, Md Aquib9, Kofi Oti Boakye-Yiadom10, Liang Ge11,12.
Abstract
Hydrogels evolved as an outstanding carrier material for local and controlled drug delivery that tend to overcome the shortcomings of old conventional dosage forms for small drugs (NSAIDS) and large peptides and proteins. The aqueous swellable and crosslinked polymeric network structure of hydrogels is composed of various natural, synthetic and semisynthetic biodegradable polymers. Hydrogels have remarkable properties of functionality, reversibility, sterilizability, and biocompatibility. All these dynamic properties of hydrogels have increased the interest in their use as a carrier for peptides and proteins to be released slowly in a sustained manner. Peptide and proteins are remarkable therapeutic agents in today's world that allow the treatment of severe, chronic and life-threatening diseases, such as diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis, hepatitis. Despite few limitations, hydrogels provide fine tuning of proteins and peptides delivery with enormous impact in clinical medicine. Novels drug delivery systems composed of smart peptides and molecules have the ability to drive self-assembly and form hydrogels at physiological pH. These hydrogels are significantly important for biological and medical fields. The primary objective of this article is to review current issues concerned with the therapeutic peptides and proteins and impact of remarkable properties of hydrogels on these therapeutic agents. Different routes for pharmaceutical peptides and proteins and superiority over other drugs candidates are presented. Recent advances based on various approaches like self-assembly of peptides and small molecules to form novel hydrogels are also discussed. The article will also review the literature concerning the classification of hydrogels on a different basis, polymers used, "release mechanisms" their physical and chemical characteristics and diverse applications.Entities:
Keywords: biodegradable polymers; controlled release; crosslinked networks; hydrogels; peptides; proteins
Year: 2018 PMID: 29346275 PMCID: PMC5874829 DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics10010016
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceutics ISSN: 1999-4923 Impact factor: 6.321
Figure 1Chitosan-basedthermosensitive hydrogel (a) networks of chitosan formed with ionic molecules, polyelectrolyte polymer, and neutral polymers; (b) thermo-reversible networks of chitosan graft copolymer resulting semi-solid gel at body temperature and liquid below room temperature. Reprinted from [46]. Copyright (2018), with permission from Elsevier.
Figure 2Glucose-sensitive hydrogel mechanism. Reprinted from [52]. Copyright (2018), with permission from Elsevier.
Figure 3Protein-based hydrogels. Reprinted from [54]. Copyright (2018), with permission from Elsevier.
Figure 4Common monomers frequently used in hydrogels.
Monomer used in the synthesis of hydrogel for Pharmaceutical Formulations.
| Monomer Abbreviations | Monomers |
|---|---|
| HPMC | Hydroxypropyl Methylcellulose |
| HEEMA | Hydroxyethoxyethylmethacrylate |
| HDEEMA | Hydroxydiethoxyethyl methacrylate |
| MA | Methacrylate |
| MEEMA | Methoxyethoxyethyl methacrylate |
| PLGA | Polymer of lactic and glycolic acid |
| PHEMA | Poly hydroxyethyl methacrylate |
| PVA | Polyvinyl alcohol |
| PEG | polyethylene glycol |
| PNIPAAm | poly |
| AA | Acrylic acid |
| MAA | Methyl Acrylic acid |
| HPMA | |
| PVA | Polyvinyl alcohol |
| PEGA | PEG-acrylate |
| PEGMA | PEG methacrylate |
| PEGDA | PEG diacrylate |
| PEGDMA | PEG dimethylcrylate |
Figure 5Formation mechanism of hydrogel: (A) hydrogen-bond-driven self-assembly; (B) self assembled fibrils; (C) fibrils with a hydrogelator concentration lower than the minimum gelation concentration (MGC); (D) entangled fibrils with a hydrogelator concentration higher than the MGC; (E) well-organized 3D hierarchical nanoarchitectures with ultrasound treatment; (F) cells seeded in hydrogels; (G) optical image of the hydrogel (the transition from solution to hydrogel was reversible). Reprinted from [99]. Copyright (2018), with permission from Royal Society of Chemistry.
Figure 6Hydrogels and their significance in their various fields of applications. Reprinted from [117]. Copyright (2018), with permission from Elsevier.