| Literature DB >> 32707753 |
Huiping Xia1,2, Meijie Ren1, Yue Zou1, Si Qin1, Chaoxi Zeng1,2.
Abstract
The natural deep eutectic solvent (NADES) is an excellent solvent for insoluble natural products and medicines. Eutectogels formed by gelation of NADESs are interesting materials that deserve attention. In this study, xanthan gum was used as a gelator to gel choline chloride-xylitol with different water contents in virtue of the excellent solubility of choline chloride-xylitol (1:1) to quercetin. We observed that water was critical to the formation of eutectogels. An MTT assay indicated that our eutectogel had excellent biocompatibility as its corresponding hydrogel. According to rheological tests, xanthan gum-based eutectogels had better viscoelastic properties, higher thermal stability, and more defined shear thinning behavior than its corresponding hydrogel. Texture profile analysis showed that eutectogels with less water content had higher hardness and adhesiveness. Meanwhile, Differential scanning calorimeter (DSC) results suggested that the various rheological and texture properties of eutectogels could be attributed to changes in the water state, which was influenced by the hydrogen bonding network of NADES. This biocompatible eutectogel with tunable properties was expected to find applications in novel drug delivery vehicles, which are widely used in the fields of medicine and food.Entities:
Keywords: eutectogel; hydrogel; natural deep eutectic solvents; xanthan gum
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32707753 PMCID: PMC7435784 DOI: 10.3390/molecules25153314
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1The preparation process of xanthan gum-based eutectogel.
Figure 2The SEM images of xanthan gum-based hydrogel (a) and eutectogels with different water contents (b) 60%, (c) 20%.
Figure 3Detection of toxicity of xanthan gum hydrogel (a) and xanthan gum eutectogels with 20% water content (b) by MTT assay. “a” is xanthan gum hydrogel.
Figure 4Strain sweep (a) and frequency sweep (b) curves of the xanthan gum-based eutectogels with different water contents and hydrogel.
Tan δ values for eutectogels with different water contents measured at 1 Hz of frequency.
|
| 0% | 20% | 40% | 60% | 80% | 100% |
| G′ | 0.21 | 674.91 | 776.53 | 667.23 | 639.71 | 375.42 |
| G″ | 40.74 | 162.90 | 118.25 | 102.82 | 95.64 | 65.27 |
| Tan δ | 190.11 | 0.24 | 0.15 | 0.15 | 0.15 | 0.17 |
G′: Elastic modulus; G′′: Viscosity modulus; Tan δ: Loss tangent.
Figure 5Flow measurement (a), temperature sweep (b), time sweep (c), and recovery tests (d) results of the xanthan gum-based eutectogels with different water contents and hydrogel.
Figure 6DSC heating curves for xanthan gum-based eutectogels with different water contents and hydrogel (a); DSC cooling curves for xanthan gum-based eutectogels with different water contents and hydrogel (b).
Figure 7The mechanical properties of eutectogels with different water contents and hydrogel. (a) Hardness, (b) adhesiveness, and (c) cohesiveness (n = 6). Bars indicate standard deviation (S.D.). Statistical differences withing each mechanical property are denoted by the small letters a–d, values presenting the same small letters in the figure mean that the samples had no significant differences between different water content.