| Literature DB >> 31581497 |
Muhammad Shajih Zafar1, Alessandra Quarta2, Marco Marradi3, Andrea Ragusa4,5.
Abstract
Reactive oxygen and nitrogen species (RONS) are produced endogenously in our body, or introduced through external factors, such as pollution, cigarette smoke, and excessive sunlight exposure. In normal conditions, there is a physiological balance between pro-oxidant species and antioxidant molecules that are able to counteract the detrimental effect of the former. Nevertheless, when this homeostasis is disrupted, the resulting oxidative stress can lead to several pathological conditions, from inflammation to cancer and neurodegenerative diseases. In this review, we report on the recent developments of different polymeric formulations that are able to reduce the oxidative stress, from natural extracts, to films and hydrogels, and finally to nanoparticles (NPs).Entities:
Keywords: ROS; antioxidant; chitosan; extract; film; hydrogel; nanoparticle; polymer; radicals
Year: 2019 PMID: 31581497 PMCID: PMC6835330 DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics11100505
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceutics ISSN: 1999-4923 Impact factor: 6.321
Figure 1Chemical structures of the main compounds exploited to reduce the oxidative stress, either alone, grafted onto a polymer, or encapsulated into NPs. (1) R = H, cellulose; R = CH2COOH, carboxymethyl cellulose; (2) R = either H or COCH3 depending on the degree of deacetylation, chitosan; (3) polylactic acid; (4) polyvinyl alcohol; (5) hyaluronic acid; (6) α−tocopherol; (7) R = H, caffeic acid; R = CH3, ferulic acid; (8) carvacrol; (9) citric acid; (10) gallic acid; (11) quercetin; (12) vanillic acid; (13) rosmarinic acid; (14) epigallocatechin gallate; (15) curcumin; (16) cystamine; (17) dopamine; (18) resveratrol; and (19) genistein.
Figure 2Schematic drawing of antioxidant molecules (central circle) extracted from natural sources (top panel) and exploited for preparing films (left panel), hydrogels (right panel), and nanoparticles (bottom panel) able to reduce the oxidative stress.
Summary of the antioxidant polymers deriving from natural sources and their effects. ABTS: 2,2′-azino-bis(3-ethylbenzothiazoline-6-sulfonic acid), DPPH: 2,2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl, MW: molecular weight.
| Source Plant | Antioxidant | Results | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| phenols and flavonoids | higher antioxidant capacity in vitro than the theoretical sum of two individual herbs, probably because of a synergistic effect | [ | |
|
| polysaccharides and phenols | antioxidant capacities comparable to BHA and BHT antioxidants proportionally to the phenol content | [ |
|
| low MW hydrolysable tannins (emblicanin-A, emblicanin-B, punigluconin, and pedunculagin) | significant decrease of several CVD risk factors | [ |
| polysaccharide (20.8% | able to scavenge DPPH radicals, but lower activity compared to that of ascorbic acid at the same concentration | [ | |
|
| polysaccharides | higher antioxidant activities by hot water extraction apparently because of a more regular and smoother surface | [ |
| polysaccharides, with minor percentages of uronic acid and proteins | remarkable ABTS and DPPH radical scavenging activities by ultrasonication extraction | [ | |
| white hyacinth bean | polysaccharides | lower scavenging activity compared to ascorbic acid, but ability to stimulate the growth of several probiotics | [ |
| barley | β-glucan (mostly β-(1,3-1,4)- | antioxidant activity higher than that of several polymers used as food additives, supposedly because the β-glucan decreased the number of pro-inflammatory cytokines (mostly IL-6 and tumor necrosis factor-alpha, TNF-α) and increased that of the antioxidants | [ |
|
| laminaran polysaccharide | noticeable antimicrobial and antioxidant properties in vitro, as well as wound-healing promotion in vivo | [ |
|
| apo-c-PC β subunit | antioxidant activity lower than that of the natural extract, confirming the scavenging role of the bilin chromophore | [ |
|
| PCB-CpcB(C-82) fluorescent phycocyanin β subunit | stronger hydroxyl and DPPH free radicals scavenging activity than apo-CpcB, probably because of the bilin binding | [ |
|
| c-PC | reduced apoptosis, DNA damage, and autophagy in oxidatively stressed blastocysts of porcine embryos | [ |
| commercially available | carotenoids and c-PC | the c-PC extract had a stronger antioxidant activity compared to the carotenoid fraction | [ |
Summary of the antioxidant polymeric films and their effects.
| Base Polymer | Additional Antioxidant | Results | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| chitosan | aqueous green tea extract | improved mechanical, water vapor barrier, and antioxidant properties | [ |
| chitosan | montmorillonite and pomegranate rind powder extract | enhanced water vapor permeability and mechanical properties and excellent antioxidant activities | [ |
| chitosan | carvacrol and pomegranate peel extract | decreased transparency but improved antioxidant activity | [ |
| chitosan | caffeic acid or gallic acid | better pH-dependent antioxidant and antimicrobial properties | [ |
| chitosan | α-tocopherol | improved UV protection, higher water vapor permeability, and better antioxidant capacity | [ |
| chitosan | rosemary, ginger, sage, tea tree, and thyme essential oil (EO); ginger, rosemary, sage, black tea, green tea, and kenaf leaves HAE | improved light barrier and tensile strength | [ |
| chitosan | rosemary, ginger, sage, tea tree, and thyme EO; ginger, rosemary, sage, black tea, green tea, and kenaf leaves HAE | the highest diffusion and antioxidant activity for the films with ginger, sage, or rosemary EO | [ |
| chitosan and inulin | oregano and thyme EO | better physicochemical properties and improved antioxidant and antimicrobial activity | [ |
| reacetylated chitosan | annatto powder and vitamin C | significantly improved ROS scavenging ability | [ |
| chitosan and wheat starch | citric acid, α-tocopherol, thyme and basil EO | films containing α-tocopherol showed a higher antioxidant ability without affecting the mechanical properties | [ |
| starch | cocoa nibs extract (CNE) | ability to quench 100% of ABTS and 94% of DPPH produced radicals with the 1% CNE-containing film | [ |
| polyurethane | lignin fractions | reproducible method for obtaining homogeneous lignin products with reliable physicochemical properties | [ |
| cellulose nanofibrils | tannin extract | improved antioxidant and UV-adsorbing properties | [ |
| carboxymethyl cellulose | sodium alginate (SA) and epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG) | edible EGCG-releasing films with strong antioxidant activity in fatty foods | [ |
| polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) | tannin | good antioxidant activities | [ |
| polylactic acid (PLA) | ferulic acid (FA), vanillic acid (VA), vitamin E (VE), and quercetin (Q) | highest antioxidant properties when FA and Q were combined at low concentration with PLA | [ |
| gelatin | rosmarinic acid | excellent ultraviolet barrier capacity, good antioxidant properties, long-term antibacterial activity | [ |
| gelatin | citric acid and chitosan | allowed the healing process in ex vivo assay in human skin | [ |
| soybean protein isolate | cortex | good rheological properties and additional antioxidant and antimicrobial properties | [ |
Summary of the antioxidant polymeric hydrogels and their effects. ROS: reactive oxygen species.
| Base Polymer | Additional Antioxidant | Results | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| PAbAE | curcumin and quercetin | controlled degradation rate and the degradation products suppressed the induced oxidative stress in HUVEC cells | [ |
| PAbAE | curcumin and quercetin (25–38 wt% loading) | slow release of the antioxidant and inhibition of the oxidative stress | [ |
| PAbAE | curcumin | ability to protect cells from radicals and increased tolerance to curcumin cytotoxicity | [ |
| PAbAE | cystamine | environmental redox sensitivity and increased IC50 by an order of magnitude | [ |
| poly(ethylene glycol)- | quaternized chitosan-g-polyaniline | good self-healing, free radical scavenging ability, antibacterial, and antioxidant activities for cutaneous wound healing; enhanced in vivo wound healing process | [ |
| hyaluronic acid-graft-aniline tetramer | high free radical scavenging capacity, high swelling ratio and antimicrobial property; accelerated in vivo healing process | [ | |
| trimethylolpropane triglycidyl ether | tannic acid | good antioxidant ability at slightly acidic pH; robust antimicrobial property | [ |
| hyaluronic acid (HA) | tannic acid | improved resistance to enzymatic degradation and antioxidant capacity | [ |
| chitosan | gallic acid and dopamine | stronger antioxidant capacity in the GA-functionalized hydrogels and in those with longer chitosan chains | [ |
| PPS- | ROS-triggered degradation and drug release | [ | |
| PPS- | in vivo differential release kinetics according to the specific degradation mechanism | [ | |
| methoxy poly(ethylene glycol)-poly( | accelerated release under oxidative stress conditions, both in vitro and in vivo | [ | |
| alginate | cerium oxide NPs | dose-dependent protection to beta cells from superoxide exposure | [ |
Summary of the polymeric antioxidant NPs and their effects. RONS: reactive oxygen and nitrogen species.
| Base Polymer | Additional Drug | Results | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| melanin | free radical scavenging capacity similar to that of ascorbic acid in HeLa cells | [ | |
| polydopamine (pDA) | reduced ROS levels in vivo in murine macrophages; alleviated acute peritonitis and acute lung injury inflammation in murine models | [ | |
| pDA-coated hemoglobin | reduced the intracellular oxidative stress without affecting the blood constituents | [ | |
| polydopamine | reduced inflammation by subgingival injection in a murine periodontitis model | [ | |
| polydopamine | demonstrated activity against multiple RONS; reduced oxidative stress in a rat model of ischemic stroke | [ | |
| PEG-polymaleic acid (PMA) | dopamine | targeted dopamine delivery through the GLUT-1 transporter | [ |
| HBA-HPOX | reduced expression of pro-inflammatory mediators in a murine model of asthma | [ | |
| PVAX | dexamethasone | reduced oxidative stress and suppression of the expression of TNF-a and iNOS in the lung of asthmatic mice | [ |
| TA | CAT | inhibition of the oxidative stress and prevention of the expression of MMP-3, disintegrin, and ADAMTS-5 in an in vitro inflammation model of degenerative disc disease | [ |
| vinylimidazole and vinylpyrrolidone | methacrylic derivatives of ibuprofen, α-tocopherol and α-tocopheryl succinate; dexamethasone | lower cisplatin-induced toxicity, downregulation of caspase 3/7 expression, lower IL-1β release, and intracellular ROS accumulation in vitro; reduced hearing loss in vivo | [ |
| chitosan | dopamine | significant reduction of the oxidative stress in SHSY-5Y cells; increased enzymatic activity of both GPx and SOD | [ |
| chitosan | genistein | efficient drug delivery to the brain after permeation through the nasal mucosa | [ |
| chitosan | curcumin, quercetin, aspirin | synergistic effect in inhibiting colon cancer progression in HCT-116 cells | [ |
| PCL | curcumin and resveratrol | sustained drug release, facilitated skin absorption, deeper penetration of resveratrol | [ |
| PVP-b-PCL | resveratrol and DAP5 | decreased production of pro-inflammatory cytokines and attenuated renal ischemia reperfusion (I/R) injury in vivo | [ |
| PEG | resveratrol | optimal protection against oxidative stress in an ex vivo human erythrocytes-based model | [ |
| Eudragit S100 | curcumin | good ABTS antioxidant activity; inhibition of the drug release until degradation of the NPs | [ |
| PLGA | curcumin | induced neural stem cells proliferation and neuronal differentiation in adult rats | [ |
| curcumin | DPPH scavenging efficiency almost comparable to that of ascorbic acid | [ | |
| PCL | high protection against oxidized LDL particles in vitro | [ | |
| PCL | significant reduction of chlorogenic acid permeated through the skin; increased topical antioxidant effect | [ | |
| graphene-like | reaction with hydroxyl radicals in macrophages | [ | |
| POM | molybdenum NPs | reduction of the clinical symptoms in mice affected by acute kidney injury | [ |
| selenocysteine-derived | reduced oxidative stress in MDA-MB-231 cells | [ | |
| low MW chitosan-coated selenium | efficiently penetrated mice tissues and protected GPx activity | [ | |
| good antimicrobial activity and excellent radical scavenging activity when compared to that of ascorbic acid | [ | ||
| pDA | MnO2 NPs and V2O5 nanowires | excellent intracellular ROS removal ability both in vitro and in vivo | [ |
| Polyelectrolyte–albumin complex | MnO2 NPs | increased tumor oxygenation by 45% in mice | [ |
| PLGA-HA | MnO2 and EGCG | higher metabolic activity and more elevated secretion of pro-angiogenic factor in vitro in stem cells | [ |
| Phospholipid–PEG | ceria-zirconia NPs | reduce mortality and systemic inflammation in vivo in sepsis mice model | [ |
| chitosan | Au NPs | good antioxidant activity which was dependent on the size, shape, and concentration of the NPs | [ |
| heparin, chitosan + GA/hydroquinone/phloroglucinol | maghemite NPs | highest antioxidant activity observed with CS-GA; an external magnetic field did not increase internalization of the NPs functionalized with the phenols | [ |