| Literature DB >> 32752061 |
Dong Han1, Qilei Chen1, Hubiao Chen1.
Abstract
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a severe systemic inflammatory disease with no cure at present. Recent developments in the understanding of inflammation and nanomaterial science have led to increased applications of nanostructured drug delivery systems in the treatment of RA. The present review summarizes novel fabrications of nanoscale drug carriers using food components as either the delivered drugs or carrier structures, in order to achieve safe, effective and convenient drug administration. Polyphenols and flavonoids are among the most frequently carried anti-RA therapeutics in the nanosystems. Fatty substances, polysaccharides, and peptides/proteins can function as structuring agents of the nanocarriers. Frequently used nanostructures include nanoemulsions, nanocapsules, liposomes, and various nanoparticles. Using these nanostructures has improved drug solubility, absorption, biodistribution, stability, targeted accumulation, and release. Joint vectorization, i.e., using a combination of bioactive molecules, can bring elevated therapeutic outcomes. Utilization of anti-arthritic chemicals that can self-assemble into nanostructures is a promising research orientation in this field.Entities:
Keywords: dietary therapeutics; drug delivery; food nanotechnology; rheumatoid arthritis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32752061 PMCID: PMC7436204 DOI: 10.3390/molecules25153506
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Representative food components as anti-RA (rheumatoid arthritis) agents in nanoscopic drug delivery systems.
Figure 2Representative lipid-based nanoscopic drug delivery systems with food-derived chemicals as loaded drugs and/or structuring agnets. (A) Nanoemulsion; (B) solid lipid nanoparticle; (C) nanomicelle; (D) nanoemulsion gel; (E) nanocapsule; (F) liposome.
Representative applications of food components as delivered anti-RA drugs.
| Food ingredient | Nano system | Model | Dose | Pharmacological Effects | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Curcumin | NEs | AIA rats | 50 mg/kg/d; | Paw swelling↓↓ a; TNF-α and IL-1β decreased | [ |
| Curcumin | Solid lipid nanoparticles | AIA rats | 10 and 30 mg/kg/d; | Joint hyperalgesia↓↓↓ a; mobility score↑↑↑↑ a; joint stiffness↓↓↓↓ a; paw volume↓↓↓↓ a; radiological score decreased | [ |
| Curcumin | Nanomicelles | RA patients | 40 mg/ | Disease activity score of joints↓↓↓↓ b; tender joint count↓↓↓ b; swollen joint count↓↓ b | [ |
| Curcumin | NEG | AIA rats | 25.71 mg/kg/ | Body weight ↑↑ a; tibiotarsal joint thickness↓ a; IL-1β, TNF-α↓↓ a; paw volume decreased; histopathological changes alleviated | [ |
| Curcumin | NEG | Carrageenan-induced paw edema; rat skin | 30 mg/kg; | Anti-inflammatory effects↑↑↑ d; skin permeation increased | [ |
| Curcumin | NEG | Carrageenan-induced paw edema; AIA rats | Paw edema↓↓↓ a; body weight↑↑↑ a; paw volume↓↓↓ a; motor incoordination↓↓↓ a; arthritic clinical score↓↓↓ a; synovium TNF-α, IL-6, IL-1β ↓↓↓ a; serum TNF-α, IL-6 ↓↓↓ a; radiological score↓↓↓ a; histopathological changes alleviated | [ | |
| Curcumin and Resveratrol | Lipid core nanocapsules | AIA rats | 1.75 mg/kg/ | Paw edema↓ d; synovial fibrosis ↓ a; cartilage loss↓ a; bone loss↓ a; histopathological changes alleviated | [ |
| Curcumin | Nanomicelles | CIA rats | 33.6 μg; IA inj. | Paw edema↓ b; TNF-α, IL-1, VEGF↓ a; histopathological changes alleviated | [ |
| Resveratrol | Nanomicelles | AIA rats | 1 mg/mL/week; IA inj.; 14 days | Knee swelling↓ a; TNF-α↓ a; histopathological changes alleviated | [ |
| sveratrol | QRu-PLGA-DS NPs | RAW 264.7 cells; CIA mice | TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-6↓↓ a; IL-4, IL-10, TGF-β↑↑ a; histopathological changes alleviated | [ | |
| Quercetin | TGA-CdTe QDs | AIA rats | 0.2 and 0.4 mg/kg/d; | Inflammation reduced; cartilage regeneration improved; histopathological changes alleviated | [ |
| Quercetin | NEG | AIA rats | 10 mg/ | TNF-α↓ c; arthritic index↓ a; stiffness score↓ a; paw circumference↓ a; rheumatoid factor↓ a | [ |
| Quercetin | PCL microspheres | HIG-82 cells, rats | 0.1 mL; IA inj. | Synovial macrophage proliferation reduced; controlled release of quercetin in the joint cavity for more than 30 days | [ |
| Hesperidin | AgNPs | AIA rats | 1mg/kg; | Arthritic score↓↓↓ a; paw swelling↓↓↓ a; TLR-2, TLR-4↓↓↓ a | [ |
a Compared with model group; b compared with before treatment; c compared with free drug administration; d compared with vehicle control. Single arrow, p < 0.05; double arrows, p < 0.01; triple arrows, p < 0.001; four arrows, p < 0.0001. Abbreviations: NEs, nanoemulsions; AIA, adjuvant-induced arthritis; RA, rheumatoid arthritis; NEG, nanoemulsion gel; CIA, collagen-induced arthritis; VEGF, vascular endothelial growth factor; IA, intra-articular; QRu-DS NPs, quadrilateral ruthenium (core)-dextran sulfate-modified poly (lactic-co-glycolic acid) (shell) nanoparticles; TGA-CdTe QDs, thio glycolic acid-capped cadmium telluride quantum dots; PCL, polycaprolactone; AgNPs, silver nanoparticles.
Figure 3Schematic preparation and administration of drug-loaded nanomicelles. Photos of (a) hyaluronic acid, (b) curcumin, and (c) hyaluronic acid/curcumin [32]. Reproduced with permission from Fan et al., ACS Appl. Mater. Interfaces; published by the American Chemical Society, 2018.
Representative fabrications of anti-RA nanocarriers using dietary oils and lecithin.
| Food Material | Nano System | Loaded Drug | Model | Dose | Pharmacological Effects | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Soybean oil | NEs | Curcumin | AIA rats | 50 mg/kg/d; | Paw swelling↓↓ a; TNF-α and IL-1β decreased | [ |
| Soybean oil | NEs | Oily mixture of camphor, menthol and methyl salicylate | Rat skin | 5% camphor, 5% menthol, and 5% methyl salicylate | Permeation rates increased | [ |
| Grape seed oil | Lipid core nanocapsules | Curcumin, resveratrol | AIA rats | 1.75 mg/kg/ | Paw edema↓ d; synovial fibrosis↓ a; cartilage loss↓ a; bone loss↓ a; radiological score decreased | [ |
| Emu oil | NEG | Curcumin | Carrageenan induced paw edema, AIA rats |
| Paw edema↓↓↓ a; body weight↑↑↑ a; motor incoordination↓↓↓ a; arthritic clinical score↓↓↓ a; synovial TNF-α, IL-6, IL-1β↓↓↓ a; serum TNF-α, IL-6 ↓↓↓ a; radiological score↓↓↓ a; histopathological changes alleviated | [ |
| Soy lecithin | Liposomes | Triptolide | CIA mice | 200 mg/kg/d; | Pannus number↓↓ a; histopathological changes alleviated | [ |
| Soy lecithin | NSSLs | MPS; BMS | AIA rats | ①At early stage: | ①At early stage: arthritis score↓↓↓ a | [ |
| Soy lecithin | NSSLs | MPS; BMS | AIA rats | NSSLs-MPS: ①10 mg/kg/week; | NSSLs-MPS: ①arthritis score↓ a; ②arthritis score↓↓ a; ③arthritis score↓↓ a;④arthritis score↓ a; ⑤splenocyte IL-6↓↓ a, IL-10↓ a, INF-γ↓ a; serum IL-6↓ a | [ |
| Soy lecithin | Sialic acid-modified liposomes | Dexamethasane palmitate | AIA rats | 0.9 mg/kg/3 days; | Paw thickness↓↓ a; joint score↓↓↓ a; IL-1β↓ a, TNF-α↓↓↓ a; histological scores↓↓ a | [ |
| Egg lecithin | Liposomes | Indomethacin | AIA rats | 3 mg/kg/d; | Edema volume↓↓ c; Ulcerogenicity↓↓ c | [ |
| Egg lecithin | Liposome hydrogel patch | Triptolide | CIA rats | 20 mg/kg; | 20 mg/kg: joint swelling↓↓ a; IL-1β↓ a, IL-6↓↓↓ a; Flk-1↓↓↓ a; Flt-4↓↓↓ a; HIF-1α↓ a | [ |
| Egg lecithin | Ultradeformable liposomal gel | MTX | AIA rats | 0.5 mg/kg/3 days; | Paw edema volume↓↓↓ a; body weight↑↑↑ a; paw histological score↓↓ a; leukocyte infiltration↓ a; neutrophils in paw tissues↓ a; TNF-a↓ a; IL-1β↓ a | [ |
| Egg lecithin | WSs | TNF-α siRNA | CIA mice | 10 μg/body; three times a week; | Arthritis incidance↓; arthritis score↓; paw thickness↓; TNF-α↓ | [ |
| Egg lecithin | Large unilamellar vesicles | APO2L/TRAIL | Antigen-induced arthritic rabbits | 5 μg; 10 μg | 5 μg: Knee lateral diameter ↓ a; inflammation↓ a; synovial hyperplasia↓ a | [ |
a Compared with model group; c compared with free drug administration; d compared with vehicle control. Single arrow, p < 0.05; double arrows, p < 0.01; triple arrows, p < 0.001. Abbreviations: NEs, nanoemulsions; AIA, adjuvant-induced arthritis; NEG, nanoemulsion gel; CIA, collagen-induced arthritis; NSSLs, sterically stabilized nanoliposomes; MPS, methylprednisolone hemisuccinate; BMS, betamethasone hemisuccinate; MTX, methotrexate; WS, wrapsome.
Figure 4Schematic structures of representative liposome-derived nanoscopic drug delivery systems. (A) Sterically stabilized nanoliposome; (B) small molecule-modified liposome; (C) liposome hydrogel; (D) ultradeformable liposome; (E) wrapsome; (F) peptide/protein-modified liposome; (G) chitosan-modified liposome; (H) nanoparticle-loaded liposome; (I) lipid–polymer hybrid nanoparticle; (J) double liposome.
Representative fabrications of anti-RA nanocarriers using chitosan.
| Food material | Nano system | Loaded drug | Model | Dose | Pharmacological effects | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CHS | CHS NPs | Betamethasone sodium phosphate | Rats | 1 and 2 mg/kg | Without any toxic effect on vital organs | [ |
| CHS | CHS NPs | Embelin | AIA rats | 25 and 50 mg/kg/d; | 25 and 50 mg/kg: arthritic score and paw swelling decreased | [ |
| CHS | CHS NPs | Zinc gluconate | CIA rats | 112.93 mg/kg; | Serum TNF-α↓↓ a, IL-1β↓↓↓ a; joint synovial IL-6↓↓↓ a, TNF-α↓↓↓ a, iNOS↓↓↓ a; histopathological changes alleviated | [ |
| CHS | Polysialic acid-trimethyl CHS NPs | DEX; MTX | SW-982 cells | 1.0 mg/mL | DEX: IL-6↓ a,d; IL-8↓ a | [ |
| CHS | Glycol CHS-steric acid NPs | MTX | AIA mice | 0.5 mg/kg/3d; | Arthritis score↓↓ a; paw thickness↓↓ a; IL-1β, TNF-a↓ c | [ |
| CHS | CHS-chondroitin sulfate NP-loaded argan oil emulsion gel | Ketoprofen | Mice skin | Compared with marketed gel, skin permeability↑↑↑↑; compared with NP-loaded gel, skin permeability↑↑ | [ | |
| CHS | CHS-NP-loaded poloxamer gel | Clodronate | THP1 cells | 1, 2, and 4 μg/mL | IL-8 and IL-1β decreased | [ |
| CHS | Thiolated glycol CHS NPs | Polymerized siRNA | RAW 264.7 cells; CIA mice | 50 μg; | TNF-α in RAW 264.7 cells decreased; TNF-α in serum and arthritic joints↓ b; arthritic score, paw thickness decreased; bone erosions in paws and ankle joints decreased | [ |
| CHS | Thiolated glycol CHS NPs | Polymerized siRNA | RAW 264.7 cells; CIA mice | Notch1 in RAW 264.7 cells ↓↓↓ a; synovial inflammation↓↓↓ a; cartilage erosion↓↓ a; neutrophil infiltration↓↓↓ a; clinical score, bone damage decreased | [ |
a Compared with model group; b compared with before; d compared with vehicle control. Single arrow, p < 0.05; double arrows, p < 0.01; triple arrows, p < 0.001; four arrows, p < 0.0001. Abbreviations: CHS, Chitosan; DEX, dexamethasone; MTX, methotrexate; NPs, nanoparticles; AIA, adjuvant-induced arthritic; CIA, collagen-induced arthritic; siRNA, small interfering RNA.
Figure 5Schematic preparation and administration of an siRNA-loaded CHS nanosystem. (a) Uptake of psi-tgCHS-NPs into macrophage cells leading to tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α gene knockdown. (b) Formation of poly-siRNA. (c) Synthesis of tgCHS polymers. (d) Complexation of poly-siRNA with tgCHS polymers [93]. Reproduced with permission from Lee et al., Mol. Ther.; published by Cell Press, 2014.
Representative fabrications of anti-RA nanocarriers using folate, folic acid and black pepper extract.
| Food material | Nano system | Loaded drug | Model | Dose | Pharmacological effects | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Folate | Folate-conjugated albumin nanoparticles | Etoricoxib | Carrageenan induced arthritis | 5 mg/kg; | Inhibition of edema increased | [ |
| Folate | Folate-conjugated liposomes | NF-kB-targeted siRNA; MTX | RAW 264.7 cells; arthritic mice |
| Cellular uptake increased; paw thickness, arthritic scores, TNF-α and IL-1β decreased | [ |
| Folate | Folate-liposomes | MTX; catalase | RAW 264.7 cells; CIA mice | 1 mg/kg/2d; | Cellular uptake increased; arthritis score↓↓ a; paw thickness↓↓ a; body weight↑↑ a; TNF-α↓↓↓ a, IL-1β↓↓↓ a | [ |
| Folate | Folate conjugated double liposomes | PRD; MTX | CIA rats | 1 mg/kg; | Inhibition of edema increased | [ |
| Folate | FA-PEG-PLGA-PCADK-lipid NPs | MTX | RAW 264.7 cells; AIA rats | 257 μg/kg/2d; | Cellular uptake increased; clinical score↓↓ c; paw thickness↓↓ c; TNF-α↓↓↓ c, IL-6↓↓ c; histopathological changes alleviated | [ |
| Folate | FA-PEG-PLGA-PK3 NPs | Mcl-1 siRNA | RAW 264.7 cells; AIA rats | 4 nmol/kg/2d; | Cellular uptake increased; clinical score↓↓↓ a; paw thickness↓↓↓ a; TNF-α↓↓↓ a, IL-6↓↓a, IL-1β↓↓ a; histopathological changes alleviated | [ |
| Folate | SA-R8-FA-PEG-PLGA-lipid polymeric hybrid NPs | MTX | RAW 264.7 cells; AIA rats | Cellular uptake increased; clinical score↓↓↓ c; paw thickness↓↓↓ c; TNF-α↓↓ c, IL-6↓↓↓c, IL-1β↓↓↓ c; histopathological changes alleviated | [ | |
| FA | FA-Oxi-αCD NPs | DEX | RAW 264.7 cells; CIA mice | 1.25mg/kg/4d; | TNF-a↓ a; arthritis index↓ a; paw thickness↓ a; synovial inflammation↓ a; cartilage erosion a; histopathological changes alleviated | [ |
| FA | FA-polysialic acid- cholesteryl chloroformate micelles | DEX | RAW 264.7 cells; AIA mice | RAW 264.7 cells: 0.1mg/mL | RAW 264.7 cells: TNF-a, IL-6 decreased | [ |
| FA | FA-SP-D-liposomes | Celecoxib | Caco-2 cells | Compared with celecoxib-loaded liposomes, COX-2↓ | [ | |
| FA | FA-PEG-PAA@SPIONPs | RAW 264.7 cells; Antigen induced arthritic rats | 5 mg/kg; | Cellular uptake increased; MRI enhanced in diagnosis | [ | |
| FA | FA-glucose-dextran-SPIONPs | RAW 264.7 cells; Antigen induced arthritic rats | 25 mg/kg; | Cellular uptake increased; MRI enhanced in diagnosis and therapy response | [ | |
| Black pepper extract | Phyto-stabilised AgNPs | AIA rats | 25 and 50 mg/kg/2d; | Paw volume↓ a; gait score↓ a; histopathologic score↓ a; histopathological changes alleviated | [ |
a Compared with model group; b compared with before treatment; c compared with free drug administration. Single arrow, p < 0.05; double arrows, p < 0.01; triple arrows, p < 0.001. Abbreviations: MTX, methotrexate; PRD, prednisolone; CIA, collagen-induced arthritic; FA, folic acid; G5, fifth-generation poly(amidoamine) dendrimers; NPs, nanoparticles; PEG, polyethylene glycol; PLGA, poly (lactic-co-glycolic acid); PCADK, poly(cyclohexane-1,4-diylacetone dimethylene ketal); PK3, polyketals 3; Mcl-1, Myeloid cell leukemia-1; AIA, adjuvant-induced arthritis; SA, stearic acid; Oxi-αcd, 4-phenylboronic acid pinacol ester-conjugated cyclodextrin biomaterials; DEX, dexamethasone; SP-D, surfactant-associated protein D; SPIONPs, superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; AgNPs, silver nanoparticles.
Figure 6Schematic cellular uptake of representative folate/FA (folic acid)-modified nanoscopic drug delivery systems. (A) Folate-PEG-PLGA-PCADK–lipid NPs [103], reproduced with permission from Zhao et al., Int. J. Nanomedicine; published by Dove Medical Press, 2017; (B) Folate-PEG-PLGA-PK3 polymeric NPs [104], reproduced with permission from Sun et al., Nanomedicine Nanotechnology, Biol. Med.; published by Elsevier, 2019; (C) SA-R8-Folate-PEG-PLGA-PK3 lipid polymeric hybrid NPs [105], reproduced with permission from Zhao et al., Eur. J. Pharm. Biopharm.; published by Elsevier, 2018. FA, folic acid; PEG, polyethylene glycol; PLGA, poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid); PCADK, poly(cyclohexane-1,4-diylacetone dimethylene ketal); MTX, methotrexate; PK3, polyketal 3; SA, stearic acid.