| Literature DB >> 32708833 |
Nicola Micale1, Andrea Citarella1, Maria Sofia Molonia1, Antonio Speciale1, Francesco Cimino1, Antonella Saija1, Mariateresa Cristani1.
Abstract
This review deals with hydrogels as soft and biocompatible vehicles for the delivery of plant-derivedEntities:
Keywords: biological activity; hydrogels; natural compounds; physiochemical properties; polymers; polyphenols
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32708833 PMCID: PMC7397257 DOI: 10.3390/molecules25143254
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1(Poly)phenol-loaded hydrogels as smart drug delivery systems.
Hydrogels for the delivery of plant-derived (poly)phenols.
| Compound | System | Disease | Experimental Model | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| In Vitro and Ex Vivo Models | In Vivo Models | ||||
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| Carbopol Ultrez® 10 NF HG | Skin wound healing | Skin wounds in Wistar rats | [ | |
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| CS-PEG-TY in presence of HRP and H2O2 | Injectable wound dressing for skin wounds | Biocompatibility on L929 mouse fibroblasts | Skin wounds in Sprague Dawley rats | [ |
|
| Carbopol 940 HG | Skin wound healing | Biocompatibility on L929 mouse fibroblasts | Skin wounds in Swiss mice | [ |
|
| Carbopol HG | Skin wound healing | Skin wounds in Sprague Dawley rats | [ | |
|
| Carbopol 980 HG | Diabetic wound healing | Skin wounds in streptozotocin-diabetic Wistar rats | [ | |
|
| Light-responsive collagen-based HG | Wound healing | Regenerative capability on HUVECs and human dermal fibroblasts (HDFs) | Skin wounds in streptozocin-diabetic C57BL/6 mice | [ |
|
| Carbopol HG | Wound healing | Skin wounds in Wistar rats | [ | |
|
| CS-HG | Wound healing | Biocompatibility on L929 mouse fibroblasts | Skin wounds in alloxan- diabetic Wistar rats | [ |
|
| Carbopol 981 HG | Diabetic wound healing | Biocompatibility on HaCaT human keratinocytes and CCD-986sk human fibroblasts | Skin wounds in streptozotocin-diabetic C57BL/6 mice | [ |
|
| HA-based nano-HG | Diabetic wound healing | Patients with diabetic foot ulcers | [ | |
|
| BCT-HG | Wound healing | Antimicrobial activity against | Wistar rats bearing third degree burn wounds | [ |
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| Ceramide liposomes incorporated into cellulose HG using ECH as cross-linking agent | Improvement of drug skin permeation | Skin permeation study on ICR hairy albino mouse skin | [ | |
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| pH-responsive | Improvement of drug skin permeation | Biocompatibility on HaCaT cells; | [ | |
|
| Ceramide Liposomes incorporated into cellulose HG | Improvement of drug skin permeation | Skin permeation study on dorsal skin of ICR hairy albino mice | [ | |
|
| NP700 HG | Improvement of drug skin permeation | Skin permeation test on hairless mouse skin | [ | |
|
| Pemulen® TR2 HG system containing pomegranate oil-based nanocapsules | Improvement of drug skin permeation | Skin permeation study on human skin | [ | |
|
| Carbopol 940 HG | Improvement of drug skin permeation | Skin diffusion study on human cadaver skin | [ | |
|
| pH and temperature sensitive poly ( | Improvement of drug skin permeation | Skin permeation study on micropig dorsal skin | [ | |
|
| Thermo-responsive hydrogels based on triblock co-polymers (PolyGelTM) | Improvement of drug skin permeation | Skin permeation study on mouse skin | [ | |
|
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| Pemulen® TR2 HG system containing pomegranate oil-based nanocapsules | Irritant contact dermatitis | Croton oil-induced ear edema in Swiss mice; | [ | |
|
| Carbopol 940 HG | Irritant contact dermatitis | Skin irritancy in White New Zealand rabbits; | [ | |
|
| Carbopol® Ultrez 20 HG | UVA/UVB radiation-induced skin damage | UVA/UVB light-induced oxidative stress on porcine ears skin | [ | |
|
| Thermosensitive CS/G/GP-HG | Corneal wound healing | H2O2-induced oxidative stress in rabbit corneal epithelial CCL-60 cells | Corneal alkali burn in New Zealand albino rabbits | [ |
|
| pH and temperature sensitive poly ( | Psoriasis | Cytotoxicity assays on HaCaT human keratinocytes | [ | |
|
| Cyclodextrin-based HG | Epithelial infections | Antibacterial activity against | [ | |
|
| CHGZ-HGs | Skin and epithelial infections | Activity against | [ | |
|
| CS-HG | Periodontal diseases | Biocompatibility on NIH 3T3 mouse fibroblasts | [ | |
|
| Tragacanth gum based HG | Recurrent aphthous stomatitis | Patients with aphthous ulcers | [ | |
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| Light-responsive collagen-based HG | Melanoma | B16F10 murine melanoma cells | Photothermal therapy in Balb/c mice bearing B16F10 cell tumor | [ |
|
| CHGZ-HGs | Skin cancer | Human skin carcinoma A431 cells | [ | |
|
| Thermo-responsive HG based on triblock co-polymers (PolyGelTM) | Melanoma | B16-F10 murine melanoma cells | [ | |
|
| PEG-HG | Oral cancer | Human oral cancer CAL-27 cells | [ | |
|
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| Thermosensitive CS/G/GP-HG | Secondary brain injury | H2O2-induced oxidative stress in Neuro-2a cells | [ | |
|
| Thermosensitive CS/G/GP-HG | Intervertebral disc degeneration | H2O2-induced oxidative stress in nucleus pulposus cells from New Zealand rabbits | [ | |
|
| Thermosensitive hydrogel based on mPEG-PA-HG | Osteoarthritis | Human chondrocytes from patients undergone knee arthroplasty | Rats undergone anterior cruciate ligament transection | [ |
|
| Thermosensitive CS/G/HG | Cardiovascular diseases | Cisd2-deficient (Cisd2−/−) cardiomyocytes and cardiac tissue of Cisd2 knockout mice | Biocompatibility in subcutaneously injected New Zealand albino rabbits and intramyocardially injected Cisd2 deficient (Cisd2−/−) and wild-type (Cisd2+/+)] rats | [ |
|
| HA-HG | Glioblastoma multiforme | Human glioblastoma A172 and T98MG cells | [ | |
|
| HA-HG | Hormone-responsive human breast cancer | Human breast cancer MCF7 cells | [ | |
|
| HA-HG | Medullary and papillary human thyroid cancer | Human medullary and papillary cancer thyroid B-CPAP and TT cells; | [ | |
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| pH-sensitive gellan gum HGs | Oral delivery system for the controlled release of hydrophobic molecules | Drug release in different pH environments | [ | |
|
| Poly electrolyte complex HG | Oral delivery | Media simulating the gastric and the intestinal tracts | [ | |
|
| pH-sensitive poly(starch/acrylic acid) HG | Ulcerative colitis | Dextran sulphate sodium-induced colitis in Wistar rats | [ | |
|
| Polyphenol-binding amyloid fibrils self-assemble into reversible HGs | Infection of small intestine | Antibacterial activity against | [ | |
|
| pH-responsive Zein- | Anticancer activity | Breast cancer MDA-MB-231and MCF-7 cells | [ | |
|
| HA-HG | Alzheimer’s disease | Human neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y cells | [ | |
Figure 2Schematic representation of the nanocomposite hydrogel (HG) developed by George D, et al. [42]; base polymer formed by chitosan (CS; drawn in blue) cross-linked with dialdehyde cellulose (drawn in black) via Schiff base formation (highlighted in yellow). ZnO nanoparticles marked in green and quercetin (Q; from onion peel waste) marked in purple.
Figure 3Chemical structure of quercetin (Q) and some related natural occurring flavonoids.
Figure 4Chemical structure of Silibinin (SB).
Figure 5Chemical structure of natural phenols with trans-cinnamic acid skeleton.
Figure 6Chemical structure of thymol.
Figure 7Chemical structure of some flavonoids of Passiflora edulis extract.
Figure 8General structure of the oligomeric proanthocyanidins (OPC; n = 0–7).
Figure 9Chemical structure of natural polyphenols employed by Huang Z. et al. [43] for the preparation of injectable dynamic covalent HGs with boronic acid polymers.
Figure 10Chemical structure of curcumin (CU).