| Literature DB >> 33324053 |
Lanmei Li1,2, Xiaomei Zhang3, Chao Pi1, Hongru Yang4, Xiaoli Zheng5, Ling Zhao1, Yumeng Wei1.
Abstract
Curcumin (CUR), as a traditional Chinese medicine monomer extracted from the rhizomes of some plants in Ginkgo and Araceae, has shown a wide range of therapeutic and pharmacological activities such as anti-tumor, anti-inflammatory, anti-oxidation, anti-virus, anti-liver fibrosis, anti-atherosclerosis, and anti-Alzheimer's disease. However, some issues significantly affect its biological activity, such as low aqueous solubility, physico-chemical instability, poor bioavailability, and low targeting efficacy. In order to further improve its curative effect, numerous efficient drug delivery systems have been carried out. Among them, physicochemical targeting preparations could improve the properties, targeting ability, and biological activity of CUR. Therefore, in this review, CUR carrier systems are discussed that are driven by physicochemical characteristics of the microenvironment (eg, pH variation of tumorous tissues), affected by external influences like magnetic fields and vehicles formulated with thermo-sensitive materials.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; curcumin; magnetic-response; pH-sensitive; targeted delivery system; thermo-sensitive
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33324053 PMCID: PMC7732757 DOI: 10.2147/IJN.S276201
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Nanomedicine ISSN: 1176-9114
Figure 1Pharmacological activities of Curcumin.
Figure 2Physicochemical targeting preparations of Curcumin.
The Influential Effect and Preparation Method of CUR-Loaded Physicochemical Targeting Preparations
| Preparations | Influential Effects | Preparation Method | Size | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| pH-sensitive | ||||
| Liposome | Enhanced inhibitory effect on EC109 | Thin-film dispersion | 141 nm | |
| Effectively transported to mouse (C57BL/6 mice bearing) tumor and significantly inhibited mouse tumor growth | Ultrasonic film hydration | 193 nm | ||
| Superior cytotoxic activity and proapoptotic against both HL-60 and HL-60/CDDP cells | Lipid film hydration method and extrusion | 127 nm | ||
| Anti-inflammatory and antioxidant activity in vitro | Micellar-vesicle transformation method and pH-driven method | <100 nm | ||
| Nanoparticle | 1) Efficiently penetrate the blood–brain barrier and enhance brain delivery efficiency; | Single-emulsion | 100 nm | |
| Colonic specific drug release | Solvent emulsion evaporation technique | 111 nm | ||
| Enhanced permeation across Caco-2 cell and significantly decreased neutrophil infiltration and TNF-a secretion | Modified spontaneous emulsification solvent diffusion method | 116 nm | ||
| Double inhibition of the cancerous cells | Solvent emulsion-evaporation technique | 97 nm | ||
| Significantly released at pH 7.0 | Ionic-gelation method | 173 nm | ||
| Enhanced significant cytotoxicity against MRC5 cells | Rotary evaporation and deposition coating | 234 nm | ||
| Delivered effectively drug to tumor and improved targeting ability | Co-condensation and coated method | about 80 nm | ||
| Micelle | Increased the tumor inhibition for HeLa, SiHa, and C33a cervical cell lines | Dialysis method | 95 nm | |
| Extended the MRT and delayed the clearance of CUR | Solvent evaporation method | 143 nm | ||
| Inhibited tumor growth and exert MDR | Synthesis and self-assemble | 228 nm | ||
| Release rapidly CUR at the acidic environment | Synthesis and self-assemble | 222 nm | ||
| Microsphere | 1) Prevented premature release and controlled release; | Emulsion cross-linking method followed by coating | 77 nm | |
| Molecular complexes | 1) Enhanced the aqueous solubility (>2 mg/mL); | Nanoprecipitation method | - | |
| Microcapsule | Suppressed degradation of CUR and controlled drug release | Synthesis and self-assemble | 1.05 um | |
| Magnetic-response | ||||
| Nanoparticle | 1) Suppressed of PCNA, Bcl-xL, Mcl-1, MUC1, Collagen I and enhanced membrane β-catenin expression; | Water-dispersible multi-layer synthesis approach | 10.5±0.54 nm | |
| Sustained-release | Modified co-precipitation | 100 nm | ||
| Showed high stability, well-tolerated by mammalian cells and MRI relaxation properties | Ultrasonic dispersion and incubation chelation method | 13 ± 4 nm | ||
| Displayed strong anticancer on MDA-MB-231 cancer cells and superior magnetic resonance imaging characteristics | Modified co-precipitation and injection method | 123 nm | ||
| Functional particle | Significantly enhanced the cellular uptake and better antiproliferative effect on the C6 glioma cell and HeLa cells | Co-precipitation, dispersion and synthesis methods | 117 nm | |
| 1) pH sensitive release, high loading capacity and hemocompatibility of CUR;2) Enhanced uptake and antiproliferation for MCF-7 breast cancer cell | Chemical co-precipitation method and molecular modified | 195 and 240 nm | ||
| 1) improved the solubility (216 µg/mL), stability and bioavailability of CUR; 2) Suppressed the growth of Caco-2 cells (CC50=65 µg/mL) | Ice bath sonication and precipitation method | 10 µm | ||
| Liposome | Magnetic heating controlled drug release by high-frequency magnetic field exposure; efficiently internalized into the cellular compartment and killed MCF-7 cells | Thin-film hydration method followed by extrusion techniques | 120–140 nm | |
| Microsphere | Showed controllable particle size and possessed good magnetic mobility | Water-in-oil-in-water method | 16–207 µm | |
| Induced HeLa cancer cells death through magnetocalorific effect | Solvent evaporation method | 75 nm | ||
| Hydrogel | Cardioprotective effects against dox-induced cardiac toxicity in rat cardiomyocyte cell lines | Emulsion polymerization and synthesis method | 18–23 nm | |
| Thermo-sensitive | ||||
| Polymer gel | Improved targeting and bioavailability in the brain | Solvent injection method | – | |
| Temperature controlled release performance | Emulsion polymerization | 180 nm | ||
| Significantly prolong retention time in solid tumors | Solvent injection method | - | ||
| Liposomal-based gel | Showed better skin permeation in vitro and significant anti-inflammatory effect in auricle edemas mice | Emulsion evaporation-solidification at low temperature | 263.9 nm | |
| Reduced toxicity of CUR and enhanced anti-tumor activity in tumor-bearing BALB/c mice | Thin-film rehydration method | 950 nm | ||
| Micelle-based gel | 1) Inhibited tumor growth and metastasis, and prolonged survival of tumor-bearing mice; | Dispersion method | 27.1 nm | |
| Showed nano-scale size, low critical micelle concentration (0.0113–0.0144 mg/mL), high drug loading (20.4%) and stability (remain stable over 1 month) | Self-assembly and solvent evaporation/film hydration | 47.5–88.2 nm | ||
Abbreviation: CUR, curcumin.
Figure 3Schematic transition of CUR into physicochemical targeting preparations.
The Trigger/Targeting Carries and Preparation Method of CUR-Loaded Physicochemical Targeting Preparations
| Types | Trigger/Targeting Carries | Ref. |
|---|---|---|
| pH-sensitive | 1) | |
| 2) A new endosomal cationic lipid consisted of glutamic acid backbone-based cationic amphiphiles | ||
| 3) Poly(isoprene-b-acrylic acid) copolymer (pI-pAA) | ||
| 4) Eudragit®S100 | ||
| 5) Chitosan and fucoidan | ||
| 6) Functionalized dendritic mesoporous silica | ||
| 7) Tannic acid-Fe(III) complex | ||
| 8) Chitosan and folate | ||
| 9) D- | ||
| 10) PEG2000-DOX | ||
| 11) Dox-oxidized sodium alginate (Dox-OSA) | ||
| 12) Zn(II)-CUR | ||
| 13) Amphiphilic N-benzyl-N,O-succinyl chitosan (BSCS) | ||
| 14) Poly(3-caprolactone)-block-poly(diethylaminoethyl methacrylate)-block-poly(sulfobetaine methacrylate) (PCL-PDEA-PSBMA) | ||
| 15) Poly(l-histidine)-poly(D,L-lactide-co-glycolide)-poly(ethylene glycol)-poly(D,L-lactide-co-glycolide)-poly(l-histidine) (PHis-PLA-PEG-PLA-Phis) and a folate targeting ligand | ||
| 16) CUR-dextran | ||
| 17) Poloxam 188-Cis-CUR conjugate | ||
| 18) mPEG-poly(lactic acid)-CUR and mPEG-poly(lactic acid)-hydrazone-CUR (mPEG-PLA-CUR and mPEG-PLA-Hydr-CUR) | ||
| 19) mPEG-PLA-tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane-CUR (mPEG-PLA-Tris-CUR) | ||
| 20) mPEG-Chitosan-Ketal (PCK) | ||
| 21) Poly(butyl-methacrylate-co-(2-dimethylaminoethyl) methacrylate-co-methyl-methacrylate) (Eudragit® EPO) | ||
| 22) Silica particles and poly(L-lysine) | ||
| 23) | ||
| 24) Pectin maleate | ||
| Magnetic | 1) Oleic acid-modified iron oxide nanoparticles and NH2-PEG3500-T7 | |
| 2) Magnetic ferrite | ||
| Thermo-sensitive | 1) | |
| 2) Poloxamer 407 | ||
| 3) Poly( | ||
| 4) | ||
| (5) Poly(ethylene glycol)-poly(ε-caprolactone)-poly(ethylene glycol) copolymer | ||
| 6) Poly( |
Abbreviations: CUR, curcumin; T7, human transferrin receptor-binding peptide T7.
Figure 4Schematic representation of liposomal coating with Eudragit@ S100 by the pH jump method.
Figure 5Representative ex vivo images of tumor and main organs (heart, liver, spleen, lung, and kidney) after administration of DOX and PEG-Dox-CUR NPs.
Reprinted from Zhang Y, Yang C, Wang W, et al. Co-delivery of doxorubicin and curcumin by pH-sensitive prodrug nanoparticle for combinationtherapy of cancer. Sci Rep. 2016;6(1):21225. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (). 55
Figure 6Evaluation of experimental colitis in the colon of mice in (A) control group (severe lesions and inflammation), (B) CUR-treated group (moderate lesions), and (C) CUR microsphere-treated group (mild lesions).
Reprinted with permission from Sareen R, Jain N, Rajkumari A, et al. pH triggered delivery of curcumin from Eudragit-coated chitosan microspheres for inflammatory bowel disease: characterization and pharmacodynamic evaluation. Drug Delivery. 2016;23(1):55–62. Copyright (2016) Taylor & Francis Ltd ().74
Figure 7Representative confocal images of (A) nano-Fe3O4-coated with CUR on SKOV-3, and (B) nano-Fe3O4-coated with CUR on SKOV-3 enhanced by magnetic field (Blue cells nuclei are labeled with DAPI, green nano-Fe3O4 are labeled with FITC (DXS-FITC), and red actin filaments are labeled with phalloidin-TRITC).