| Literature DB >> 33967781 |
Jin Xie1, Shengjie Huang1, Haozhou Huang1, Xuan Deng1, Pengfei Yue2, Junzhi Lin3, Ming Yang2, Li Han1, Ding-Kun Zhang1,2.
Abstract
Psoriasis, an incurable autoimmune skin disease, is one of the most common immune-mediated disorders. Presently, numerous clinical research studies are underway, and treatment options are available. However, these treatments focus on improving symptoms of the disease and fail to achieve a radical cure; they also have certain toxic side effects. In recent years, natural products have increasingly gained attention because of their high efficiency and low toxicity. Despite their obvious therapeutic effects, natural products' biological activity was limited by their instability, poor solubility, and low bioavailability. Novel drug delivery systems, including liposomes, lipospheres, nanostructured lipid carriers, niosomes, nanoemulsions, nanospheres, microneedles, ethosomes, nanocrystals, and foams could potentially overcome the limitations of poor water solubility and permeability in traditional drug delivery systems. Thus, to achieve a therapeutic effect, the drug can reach the epidermis and dermis in psoriatic lesions to interact with the immune cells and cytokines.Entities:
Keywords: natural products; novel drug delivery systems; pathogenesis; psoriasis; target
Year: 2021 PMID: 33967781 PMCID: PMC8097153 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2021.644952
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
FIGURE 1The differences between normal skin and psoriatic skin. The epidermis contains four homogenous layers: stratum basale (1), the stratum spinosum (2), the stratum granulosum (3), and the stratum corneum (4).
FIGURE 2The relationship between the MDCs and the T cells.
Flavonoids for the treatment of psoriasis.
| Natural compound | Experimental model | Therapy | Dose | Dosage form | Mechanism of action | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amentoflavone | IMQ-induced BALB/c mice/M5 (a cocktail of cytokines)-treated HaCaT cells | Oral administration | 25 mg/kg | — | Inhibited the increase of expression of cyclin D1, cyclin E, IL-17A, and IL-22, suppressed the expression of NF-κB |
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| Epigallocatechin-3-gallate | IMQ-induced BALB/c mice | Topical application | — | Solution (glycerin solvent: 50% glycerin, 50% normal saline) | Reduced the expression of epidermal PCNA, promoted the expression of caspase-14 |
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| Cyanidin | Primary human keratinocytes | — | 20 μM | — | Upregulated expression of all five LCE3 genes |
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| Astilbin | IMQ-induced BALB/c mice | Oral administration | 50 mg/kg | Solution (dissolved in DMSO, then diluted in normal saline) | Ameliorated elevations in circulating CD4+ and CD8+ T cells and inflammatory cytokines (IL-17A, TNF-α, IL-6, IFN-γ, and IL-2) |
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| Quercitrin | IMQ-induced C57BL/6 mice | Oral administration | 50 mg/kg | Solution (dissolved vehicle [Ethanol: Normal saline: Tween-80: Peanut oil = 12:23:5:60, V/V]) | Lowered the expression of cytokines related to psoriasis, especially those on the IL-23/Th17 axis, inhibited the Th17 cell response regulated by the JAK/STAT signaling pathway |
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| Quercetin | IMQ-induced BALB/c mice | Oral administration | 120 mg/kg | Suspensions (resuspended in 0.5% carboxy-methyl cellulose sodium) | Downregulated the expression of NF-κB, IKKα, NIK, and RelB and up-regulated the expression of TRAF3 |
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| Naringenin | IMQ-induced BALB/c/IMQ-stimulated keratinocytes | Topical application | — | — | Suppressed IL-6 over expression to baseline control |
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| Glabridin | IMQ-induced BALB/c mice/HaCaT cells | Topical application | 10 mg/kg | Solution (dissolved in butanediol) | Inhibited the expression of IL-6, IL-1β, IL-17A, TNF-α, IL-22, and IL-23 and CCL2 |
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| Hesperidin | IMQ-induced BALB/c mice/LPS-stimulated HaCaT cells | Oral administration | 125 mg/kg | Solution (dissolved in pure water) | Modulated the secretion levels of serum leptin, adiponectin, and resistin and inhibited the activation of the IRS-1/erk1/2 |
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| Hispidulin | IMQ-induced C57BL/6 J mice/Activated keratinocytes | Oral administration | 0.1 mg/kg | — | Alleviated pathologically increased levels of immunoglobulin G2a, myeloperoxidase, and TNF-α, splenic, reduced Th1 and Th17 cell populations, and inhibited gene expression of Th1- and Th17-associated cytokines and chemokines, and phosphorylation of mitogen-activated protein kinases and NF-κB |
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| Luteolin | TNF-triggered human keratinocytes | — | 10 μM | Solution (dissolved in DMSO) | Inhibited the production of inflammatory mediators IL-6, IL-8, and VEGF |
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| Taxifolin | IMQ-induced BALB/c mice/LPS-induced HaCaT cells | Oral administration | 40 mg/kg | Solution (dissolved in distilled water) | Inhibited Notch1 and JAK2/STAT3 signal pathways |
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| Proanthocyanidin | IMQ-induced BALB/c mice | Topical application | 200 mg/kg | — | Decreased inflammatory cell infiltration and downregulated expression of the psoriasis-associated genes IL17a, IL22, S100a9, and Krt1 and inhibited arachidonate 5-lipoxygenase |
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| Delphinidin | Normal human epidermal keratinocytes (NHEKs) | — | 10–40 μM | Solution (dissolved in DMSO) | Enhanced cornification and increased the protein expression of cornification markers, including caspase-14 and keratin 1 |
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| Delphinidin | Full-thickness three-dimensional reconstituted human skin | — | 20 μM | Solution (dissolved in DMSO) | Induced the mRNA and protein expression of markers of differentiation (caspase-14, filaggrin, loricrin, and involucrin) |
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| Delphinidin | Flaky skin mice (fsn/fsn) | Topical application | 0.5 mg/cm2 | — | Reduced pathological markers of psoriasiform lesions, infiltration of inflammatory cells, and the mRNA and protein expression of inflammatory cytokines |
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| Rhododendrin | IMQ-induced C57BL/6 mice/normal human epidermal keratinocytes | Topical application | 20 mM | — | Reduced inflammatory mononuclear cell infiltration and the expression of pro-inflammatory mediators and inhibited the activation of the TLR-7/NF-κB and mitogen-activated protein kinase pathways |
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| Baicalein | HaCaT keratinocytes | — | 10 μM | — | Increased expression of keratins 1 and 10 (K1/K10) and increased the phosphorylation of ERK, AKt, and p38 MAPK. |
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| Genistein | HaCaT cells | — | — | Solution (dissolved in DMSO) | Suppressed ROS activation and reduced the RNA and protein level of cytokine (IL-8, IL-20, and CCL2) |
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Phenylpropanoids for the treatment of psoriasis.
| Natural compound | Experimental model | Therapy | Dose | Dosage form | Mechanism of action | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Isopsoralen | IMQ-induced BALB/c mice | Topical application | 0.03 mg/cm2 | Solution (dissolved in PEG400/pH7.4 buffer (1:4) | Downregulated the expression of IL-6 |
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| Psoralen | Patients with plaque-type psoriasis | Oral administration | 25 mg/m2 (based on body surface area) | — | — |
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| Psoralen | Patients (psoriasis area and severity index score of 8–15) | Topical application | — | Cream | — |
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| 8-Methoxypsoralen | Inpatients with psoriasis vulgaffs | Oral administration | 0.6 mg/kg | — | Suppressed the migrational activity of circulating neutrophils and monocytes and reduced the chemotactic activity in the |
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| 8-Methoxypsoralen | K5.hTGF-β1 transgenic mice | Topical application | — | Tincture | Suppressed the IL-23/Th17 pathway, Th1 milieu, transcription factors STAT3 and orphan nuclear receptor RORgt and induced the Th2 pathway and IL-10–producing CD4+ CD25 + Foxp3 + tregs |
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| Curcumin | HaCaT cells | Phototherapy | 0.2–1 μg/ml | Solution (dissolved in DMSO) | Increased fragmented cell nuclei, the release of cytochrome c from mitochondria, activated caspase-9 and caspase-8, inhibited NF-κB activity, and inhibited extracellular regulated kinases 1/2 and protein kinase B |
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| Curcumin | HaCaT cells | Phototherapy | 1.25–3.12 μM | Solution (dissolved in DMSO) | Inhibited NF-κB activity and activated caspase-8 and caspase-9 while preserving the cell membrane integrity and downregulated the phosphorylation level of Akt and ERK |
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| Curcumin | IMQ-induced BALB/c mice | Topical application | 50 mg/cm2 | Gel (curcumin hydroxypropylcellulose gel) | Decreased the mRNA levels of IL-17A, IL-17F, IL-22, IL-1β, IL-6, and TNF-α and downregulated IL-17A/IL-22 production |
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| Curcumin | HaCaT cells | — | 50 μM | — | Downregulated the expression of IL-17, IL-6, TNF-α, and IFN-γ and up-regulated the expression of involucrin and filaggrin |
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| Curcumin | TNF-α-treated HaCaT cells | — | 7.37 μg/ml | Solution (dissolved in 50% propylene glycol PBS solution) | Upregulated the expression of TRAIL-R1/R2 and inhibited the TNF-α–induced production of IL-6/IL-8 in HaCaT cells |
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| Resveratrol | IMQ-induced BALB/c/AnNTac mice | Oral administration | 400 mg/kg | — | Increased the expression of RXR and decreased the expression of IL-17 dependent pathways, IL-17A, IL-17F, and IL-19 |
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| Resveratrol | HaCaT cells | — | 50 μM | — | Inhibited the Akt pathways by inducing Sirt1 |
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| Resveratrol | Normal human epidermal keratinocyte | — | 40 μM | — | Downregulated the expression of AQP3 via an SIRT1/ARNT/ERK-dependent manner |
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Terpenoids for the treatment of psoriasis.
| Natural compound | Experimental model | Therapy | Dose | Dosage form | Mechanism of action | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Andrographolide | IMQ-induced C57/BL6 mice | Oral administration | 5 mg/kg | — | Reduced expression of IL-23 and IL-1β in the skin |
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| Artesunate | IMQ-induced BALB/c mice | Intraperitoneally injected | 60 mg/kg | — | Inhibited the expression of γδ T cells in draining lymph nodes |
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| Cycloastragenol | IMQ-induced C57BL/6 mice | Oral administration | 25 mg/kg | — | Selectively modulated macrophage function by inhibiting NLRP3 inflammasome-mediated pyroptosis |
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| 3β,6β,16β-trihydroxylup-20 (29)-ene | 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-acetate induced swiss mice/HaCaT cells | Topical application | 0.656 μmol/ear | Solution (dissolved in 20 μL of ethanol-acetone (1:1)) | Activated corticosteroid receptors |
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| Celastrol | Human HaCaT keratinocytes | — | 2.2 μM | Solution (dissolved in DMSO) | Inhibited the NF-κB activity |
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| Dehydrocostuslactone and costunolide | Human keratinocytes | — | 12.5 μM | — | Counteracted the proinflammatory effects of IFN-γ and IL-22 on keratinocytes and reverted the apoptosis-resistant phenotype |
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| Paeoniflorin | IMQ-induced C57BL/6 mice | Oral administration | 120 mg/kg | Solution (dissolved in normal saline) | Regulated Th17 cell response and cytokine secretion via phosphorylation of STAT3 |
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Alkaloids for the treatment of psoriasis.
| Natural compound | Experimental model | Therapy | Dose | Dosage form | Mechanism of action | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Indirubin | IMQ induced BALB/c mice/Primary human epidermal keratinocytes | Subcutaneously given | 50 mg/kg | — | Increased the level of CD274 in epidermal keratinocytes and alleviated the symptom of psoriasis-like mice depending on CD274 |
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| Cannabinoids | Keratinocytes | — | — | — | Inhibited keratinocyte proliferation |
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| Rutaecarpine | IMQ induced BALB/c mice | Topical application | — | Cream | Inhibited the NF-κB and TLR-7 pathways |
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| Isocamptothecin | HaCaT cells | — | 51 μg/ml | — | Downregulated the telomerase activity of HaCaT cells |
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| Acridones | HaCaT keratinocytes | — | — | — | Inhibited human keratinocyte growth |
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| Phytosphingosine derivatives | IL-23-induced C57BL/6 mouse | Topical application | — | — | Inhibited NF-κB, JAK/STAT, and MAPK signaling |
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| Oxymatrine | Patients with psoriasis | Intravenous drip | 0.6 g daily | Solution | Inhibited the proliferation of epidermal cells in the skin lesion and increased Bcl-2 expression and decreased TUNEL-positive cells |
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| Oxymatrine | IMQ induced C57BL/6 mice/HaCaTs cells | Intraperitoneal injected | 15 mg/kg | Solution (dissolved in sterile saline) | Inhibited the expression of Hsp90 and Hsp60 in keratinocytes through the MAPK signaling pathway |
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| Oxymatrine | Patients with severe plaque psoriasis | Intravenous | 0.6 g daily | Solution | — |
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FIGURE 3The chemical structures of natural products for the treatment of psoriasis. A: Flavonoids, B: Phenylpropanoids, C: Terpenoids, D: Alkaloids, E: Steroids, F: Organic acids. (1) Quercetin, (2) Cyanidin, (3) Naringenin, (4) Taxifolin, (5) Aromatic-turmerone, (6) Hispidulin, (7) Delphinidin, (8) Quercitrin, (9) Luteolin, (10) Amentoflavone, (11) Epigallocatechin-3-gallate, (12) Glabridin, (13) Proanthocyanidin, (14) Astilbin, (15) Hesperetin, (16) Rhododendrin, (17) Baicalein, (18) Genistein, (19) Isopsoralen, (20) Psoralen, (21) 8-methoxypsoralen, (22) Curcumin, (23) Resveratrol, (24) gallic acid, (25) Betulinic acid, (26) Andrographolide, (27) artesunate, (28) 3β,6β,16β-Trihydroxylup-20. (29)-ene (29) Celastrol, (30) Indirubin, (31) Oxymatrine, (32) Capsaicin, (33) Cannabinoids, (34) Rutaecarpine, (35) Acridones, (36) Diosgenin, (37) Periplogenin, (38) Salicylic acid, (39) Gambogic acid.
Nanoformulation-based natural products for the treatment of psoriasis.
| Nanoformulation | Category | Drug | Drug limitations | Preparation method | Therapy | Remark | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Liposomes | Alkaloids | Capsaicin | Irritating, burning effects on the skin | The thin-film hydration method | Topical application | Reduced the side effects of the drug and increased the therapeutic efficacy |
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| Ethosomes | Phenylpropanoids | Psoralen | Poor permeability | The injection ultrasonic combination method | Topical application | Enhanced cutaneous absorption of drugs and permeability |
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| Niosomes | Phenylpropanoids | 8-Methoxypsoralen | Gastrointestinal adverse effects and a higher risk of severe complications | The thin film hydration method | Psoralen ultraviolet a (PUVA) therapy | Promoted penetration and accumulation of 8-Methoxypsoralen |
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| NLCs | Alkaloids | Pentoxifylline | Poor permeability | The thin lipid film-based microwave-assisted rapid technique | Topical application | Enhanced anti-inflammatory potential |
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| Phenylpropanoids | Curcumin | Highly hydrophobic molecule with low water solubility | The hot emulsification method | Topical application | Improved permeation and skin retention, showed no toxicity toward keratinocyte cells |
| |
| Terpenoids | Thymol | High volatility and can also decompose due to heat, humidity, oxygen, or light | The sonication method | Topical application | Enhanced anti-inflammatory potential |
| |
| Terpenoids | Tripterine | Long-term oral administration of TRI can lead to toxicity on renal and reproductive systems | The emulsification evaporation method | Topical application | Revealed the sustained release characteristics, showed great stability and biocompatibility |
| |
| Nanoemulsions | Terpenoids | Paclitaxel | Poor solubility and permeability | Low energy emulsification methods | Dermal/Oral delivery | Enhanced absolute and per oral bioavailability | — |
| Phenylpropanoids | 8-Methoxypsoralen | Poor permeability | High-energy method | Topical application | Enhanced retention in viable skin |
| |
| Organic acids | Salicylic acid | Poor aqueous solubility and instability | Low-energy, spontaneous emulsification method | Topical application | Improved anti-inflammatory action |
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| Dendrimers | Phenylpropanoids | 8-Methoxypsoralene | Gastrointestinal side effects and complications | The divergent method | Topical application | Enhanced skin permeation and concentration of 8-Methoxypsoralen in epidermis and dermis |
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FIGURE 4The potential penetration routes of novel drug delivery systems. a: liposomes, b: nanostructured lipid carriers, c: niosomes, d: nanoemulsions, e: microneedles, f: ethosomes, j: nanocrystals, h: foams.
The advantages/disadvantages of nanoformulation for the treatment of psoriasis.
| Nanoformulation | Advantages | Disadvantage |
|---|---|---|
| Liposomes | Biocompatible, ease of surface modification and can improve the drug retention in the skin | Rapid drug leakage, large size |
| Ethosomes | Can target deep skin layers, show excellent flexibility and deformability | Risk of organic solvent residue |
| Niosomes | Can increase the residence time of drugs in the SC and epidermis | Physical instability |
| Lipospheres | Can release slowly, and show good skin compatibility | Physical and chemical instability |
| SLNs | Biodegradable and biocompatible | Physical instability, rapid drug leakage |
| NLCs | Higher drug loading capacity and stability compared to SLNs | — |
| Nanoemulsions | Elastic properties and fluid performance | Usage of expensive instruments |
| Nanocrystals | High drug loading capacity | Difficult to be surface-modified |