| Literature DB >> 34207139 |
Anastasia Kyriakoudi1, Eleni Spanidi2, Ioannis Mourtzinos1, Konstantinos Gardikis2.
Abstract
Plants constitute a rich source of diverse classes of valuable phytochemicals (e.g., phenolic acids, flavonoids, carotenoids, alkaloids) with proven biological activity (e.g., antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, antimicrobial, etc.). However, factors such as low stability, poor solubility and bioavailability limit their food, cosmetics and pharmaceutical applications. In this regard, a wide range of delivery systems have been developed to increase the stability of plant-derived bioactive compounds upon processing, storage or under gastrointestinal digestion conditions, to enhance their solubility, to mask undesirable flavors as well as to efficiently deliver them to the target tissues where they can exert their biological activity and promote human health. In the present review, the latest advances regarding the design of innovative delivery systems for pure plant bioactive compounds, extracts or essential oils, in order to overcome the above-mentioned challenges, are presented. Moreover, a broad spectrum of applications along with future trends are critically discussed.Entities:
Keywords: bioactive compounds; carriers; delivery systems; encapsulation; essential oils; extracts
Year: 2021 PMID: 34207139 PMCID: PMC8234206 DOI: 10.3390/plants10061238
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plants (Basel) ISSN: 2223-7747
Figure 1Representative classes of plant-derived bioactive compounds.
Figure 2Types of carriers for the delivery of phytochemicals (abbreviations: SPIONs, superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles; MLV, multilamellar vesicles; LUV, large unilamellar vesicles; SUV, small unilamellar vesicles; NLC, nanostructured lipid carriers; SLN, solid lipid nanoparticles).
Figure 3Schematic overview of the different lipid-based delivery systems (abbreviations: MLV, multilamellar vesicles; LUV, large unilamellar vesicles; SUV, small unilamellar vesicles; NLC, nanostructured lipid carriers; SLN, solid lipid nanoparticles).
Overview of different lipid-based delivery systems that have been used for the encapsulation of various pure plant bioactive compounds, extracts and essential oils.
| Type of Lipidic Carrier | Encapsulated Material | Target of Encapsulation | Size of the Obtained Delivery System | Application | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Liposome | Quercetin | Solubility | 107–139 nm | Oxidative stress and enhanced internalization by cells | [ |
| Liposome | Quercetin | Solubility | 75–150 nm | Antioxidant activity and stability | [ |
| Liposome | Curcumin | Solubility, stability and biocompatibility | 350–600 nm | Antioxidant activity and stability | [ |
| Liposome | Quercetin | Solubility | 50–300 nm | Anticancer and treatment of glioma | [ |
| Liposome | Curcumin | Solubility, stability and bioavailability | 100–200 nm | Anti-inflammatory activity, sustained-release properties and increased antioxidant activity | [ |
| Liposome | Curcumin | Solubility | 200 nm | Antioxidant activity and anti-inflammatory | [ |
| Liposome | Curcumin | Solubility | 182.4 ± 89.2 nm | Anti-inflammatory | [ |
| Liposome | Curcumin | Bioavailability | 147 ± 6 nm | Wound healing, antibacterial activity and biocompatibility | [ |
| Liposome | Curcumin | Solubility and bioavailability | 121.81 ± 9.78 nm | Hepatoprotective | [ |
| Liposome | Curcumin | Solubility and bioavailability | 82.37 ± 2.19–92.42 ± 4.56 nm | Anticancer (skin) | [ |
| Liposome | Curcumin | Bioavailability and stability | 51.75–140.35 nm | Anticancer (skin) | [ |
| Liposome | Curcumin | Bioavailability | >270 nm | Anticancer | [ |
| Liposome | Curcumin | Solubility and delivery | 420–600 nm | Anticancer (cytotoxicity in lung and colon cancer) | [ |
| PEGylated liposomes | Resveratrol | Stability and biocompatibility | 86 ± 2.7–171 ± 27.8 nm | Oxidative stress (in vitro and ex vivo) | [ |
| Liposome | Resveratrol | Bioavailability and solubility | 182.3 ± 12.1–211.2 ± 0.8 nm | Anticancer (brain) | [ |
| Liposome | Resveratrol | Solubility and bioavailability | 206 ± 10–225 ± 10nm | Antioxidant activity and anti-inflammatory | [ |
| Liposome | Solubility | 152.5 ± 1.1 nm | Antioxidant activity | [ | |
| Liposome | Green tea polyphenols | Stability, bioavailability and biotransformation | 64.5–252 nm | Antioxidant activity and controlled release | [ |
| Liposome (soy lecithin liposomes) | Green tea polyphenols (catechin and epigallocatechin gallate) | Stability and shelf- life | - a | Stability | [ |
| Liposome | Curcumin | Solubility and bioavailability | 45–130 nm | Anticancer (brain) | [ |
| Liposome | Bioavailability, stability and in vitro release | 337.8 ± 40.2–117.1 ± 9.7 nm | Edema of brain and reduce the infarct volume | [ | |
| Liposome | Bioavailability | 40nm | Absorption from intestinal tract in rats | [ | |
| Liposome | Stability | 46 nm | Higher oxidative stability | [ | |
| Transfersomes | Caffeine and minoxidil | Stability and release | - a | Alopecia | [ |
| Transfersomes | Apigenin | Stability and release | 35.41 nm | Skin cancer | [ |
| Transfersomes | Epigallocatechin-3-gallate (from | Solubility and stability | 101.2 ± 6.0 nm | Antioxidant and anti-aging properties (antioxidant and anti-aging effects in UV radiation induced skin damage) | [ |
| Ethosomes | Caffeic acid | Stability | 200 nm | Antioxidant | [ |
| Ethosomes | Ginsenoside from | Delivery | 108.5 to 322.9 nm | Enhanced skin permeation, retention and deposition in vitro | [ |
| Νiosomes | Herbal constituents | Solubility, bioavailability, controlled release and stability | - a | Blood–brain barrier targeted delivery | [ |
| Νiosomes |
| Solubility and permeability | 5.3 ± 0.3 to 15.9 ± 2.2 μm | Antimicrobial activity | [ |
| Νiosomes | Flavonoid morusin | Solubility and controlled release | 400–500 nm (479 nm) | Antimicrobial activity | [ |
| Liposomes | Apigenin | Bioavailability | 304.10–361.46 nm | Anti-inflammatory | [ |
| Nanocrystals | Apigenin | Bioavailability | 439 ± 20 nm | Antioxidant activity | [ |
| Solid Lipid Nanoparticles | Epigallocatechin-3-gallate (EGCG) | Biocompatibility and toxicity | 144–134 nm | Antiproliferative effect | [ |
| NLC | Silymarin | Bioavailability, controlled release | 213.6 ± 16.0 nm | Used as model | [ |
| NLC and SLN | Quercetin | Bioavailability, loading efficiency | 67.46–74.61 nm | Brain cancer | [ |
| NLC | Curcumin | Cell penetration | 100–1250 nm | Breast cancer | [ |
| NLC | Curcumin | In vitro digestion, controlled release | 225.8 ± 2.3 nm | Used as model | [ |
| NLC | Curcumin | In vivo antiplasmodial activity, controlled release | 145 nm | Malaria | [ |
| NLC | Curcumin and partially hydrolyzed ginsenoside | Bioavailability, controlled release | 150–200 nm | Used as model | [ |
| NLC | Bioavailability, encapsulation efficiency, stability | 470 ± 8–344 ± 12 nm | Used as model | [ | |
| NLC | Cinnamon essential oil | Protection and stability | 100 ± 1–120 ± 10 nm | Food beverages | [ |
| NLC | Peppermint essential oil | Bioavailability, protection | 40–250 nm | Antimicrobial, wound healing | [ |
| NLC | Sucupira essential oil | Controlled release | 148.1 ± 1 nm | Diabetes mellitus | [ |
a Not mentioned.
Overview of different carbohydrates that have been used as wall materials for the encapsulation of various pure plant bioactive compounds, extracts and essential oils.
| Carbohydrate as Wall | Carbohydrate Origin and Characteristics | Core Material | Encapsulation Process | Type of the Obtained | Morphological Characteristics of the Obtained Delivery System | Application | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Starch | Starch from water chestnut seeds, horse chestnut seeds and lotus stem | Resveratrol | Ultrasonication method | Nanocapsules | 419, 797 and 691 nm, increased amorphous character |
Controlled released in intestinal juice Anti-obesity and anti-diabetic activity after digestion compared to that of free resveratrol | [ |
| Starch | Starch from horse chestnut, water chestnut and lotus stem | Catechin | Ultrasonication | Nanoparticles | 322.7, 559.2 and 615.6 nm |
Increased bioaccessibility upon in vitro digestion and cell permeability of catechin | [ |
| Starch | Starch from pea, corn and potato | Quercetin (standard) | Nanoprecipitation | Nanoparticles | Non-uniformly shaped and nanofiber-like nanoparticles (500 nm) from pea, corn and potato starch, respectively |
Increased in vitro antioxidant activity | [ |
| Starch | High-amylose corn starch with 70% amylose and low-amylose potato starch | Vitamin D3 | Ultrasonication | Nanoparticles | 32.0–99.2 nm |
Increased thermal stability | [ |
| Starch | Modified (extruded) | Spray drying | Microparticles | Oval or round, <10 μm |
Antimicrobial activity mainly against L. monocytogenes, E. coli, S. aureus and S. tiphymurium | [ | |
| Starch | Modified from rice starch | Anthocyanin extract from purple rice bran | Spray drying | Microparticles | Spherical, 6.4 μm |
Storage stability of anthocyanins at 4 °C, then at 25 °C, for 90 days Effect on the steady-shear rheology of the rice dough | [ |
| Starch | Dafozhi, damaling and daguo starches (amylose contents of 33.5%, 26.7% and 29.8%, respectively) | Nanoprecipitation | Nanospheres | Spherical, 255–396 nm |
Improved sustained release in artificial gastric and intestinal juices compared to the free extracts | [ | |
| β-Cyclodextrin | β-Cyclodextrin (purity 98%) | Curcumin | Inclusion complexation | Particles | 2–3 µm |
Enhanced aqueous solubility Sustained release of curcumin over a period of 5 h | [ |
| β-Cyclodextrin | Methylated-β-cyclodextrin, Mw = 1191 Da | Resveratrol | Inclusion complexation | Particles | Irregular shape |
Improved solubility Antibacterial activity against Preservation of the antioxidant activity | [ |
| β-Cyclodextrin with β-glucan | - a | Saffron anthocyanins | Spray drying | Microcapsules | Irregular shape, <124 µm |
Release of the maximum amount of anthocyanins during 2 h of simulated intestinal conditions | [ |
| Maltodextrin | Maltodextrin | Saffron aqueous extract | Nano-spray drying | Nanoparticles | Spherical, 1.5–4.2 µm |
Enhanced stability under in vitro digestion conditions compared to unencapsulated saffron extracts | [ |
| Maltodextrin | Commercial maltodextrin, 4-7 DE | Pineapple peel hydroalcoholic extract | Spray drying | Microparticles | Spherical, 18.2 µm |
Stable antioxidant activity upon storage for six months at 5 °C | [ |
| Chitosan | Low molecular weight chitosan | Curcumin | Ionic gelation | Nanoparticles | Spherical, 167.3–251.5 nm |
Enhanced: drug release transdermal permeation and % cell viability of human keratinocyte (HaCat) cells | [ |
| Chitosan and pectin | Low molecular weight chitosan from shrimp (deacetylation degree 94.87%) and commercial grade low-methoxy pectin from citrus peel (degree of esterification 2.9%) | Garlic and holy basil essential oils | Ionic gelation | Hydrogel beads | Globular, smooth bead surface, 1.65–2.86 mm |
Antimicrobial activity against B. cereus, C. perfringens, E. coli, Pseudomonas fluorescens, L. monocytogenes and S. aureus | [ |
| Chitosan and gum Arabic | Deacetylation degree 93% | Curcumin | Polyelectrolyte complexation | Nanoparticles | Spherical and smooth, 250–290 nm |
Increased in vitro antioxidant activity (DPPH, FRAP assays) of curcumin Delayed release of curcumin in simulated gastrointestinal conditions | [ |
| Chitosan | Medium molecular weight chitosan (deacetylation degree 75–85%) | Cardamom essential oil | Ionic gelation | Nanoparticles | 50–100 nm |
Non-hemolytic and non-cytotoxic behavior on human corneal epithelial cells and HepG2 cell lines Antimicrobial potential against extended spectrum β lactamase producing | [ |
| Chitosan | Medium molecular weight chitosan (deacetylation degree 75–85%) | Lime essential oil | Nanoprecipitation | Nanoparticles | Spherical, 6.1 ± 0.4 nm |
Antibacterial activity against the food-borne pathogen | [ |
| Chitosan | Medium molecular weight chitosan (deacetylation degree 84.8%) | Peppermint and green tea essential oils | Emulsification-ionic gelation | Nanoparticles | Spherical, 20–60 nm |
Increased antioxidant activity by ~2 and 2.4-fold for peppermint and green tea essential oils, respectively Antibacterial activity against | [ |
| Chitosan | Medium molecular weight chitosan (deacetylation degree 75–85%) | Sol-gel method | Nanogel | 567.1–575.6 nm |
Inhibitory effect on biofilm formation against | [ | |
| Pectin and zein | Citrus peel pectin | Resveratrol | Antisolvent precipitation and electrostatic deposition | Nanoparticles | Spherical, 235 nm |
Higher in vitro antioxidant activity compared to free resveratrol Higher antiproliferative activity against human hepatocarcinoma Bel-7402 cells compared to free resveratrol | [ |
| Pectin with whey protein concentrate | Citrus low-methoxyl pectin (DE 16–20%) | D-Limonene | Nanocomplex formation | Nanoparticles | Spherical, 100 nm |
Protection during processing and storage Controlled release | [ |
| Pectin, zein and sodium caseinate | Citrus peel pectin | Eugenol | Nanocomplex formation and nano-spray drying | Nanoparticles | Spherical, 140 nm |
Stability upon storage at room temperature for 56 days | [ |
| Pectin and egg yolk low density lipoprotein | Citrus peel pectin | Curcumin | Heat-induced nanocomplex formation | Nanogels | Spherical, <60 nm |
Increased stability under simulated gastrointestinal conditions Controlled release of curcumin | [ |
| Pectin and pea protein isolate | High-methoxyl citrus pectin (DE 90%), beet pectin (DE 62%), low-methoxyl citrus pectin (DE 29%), apple pectin (DE 78%) | Curcumin | Nanocomplex formation | Nanoparticles | Spherical, 559.2 ± 6.2 nm |
Protection of curcumin against UV light and thermal degradation Delayed release of curcumin upon in vitro gastrointestinal digestion | [ |
| Pectin | Citrus pectin | Citrus peel flavonoids | Ionic gelation | Nanoparticles | Spherical, 271.5 ± 5.3 nm |
Controlled release in gastrointestinal fluids Improved antioxidant activity | [ |
| Pectin with whey protein concentrate (WPC) | Citrus high-methoxyl pectin (DE 71.1%) | Olive leaf extract | Double-layered emulsification | Nanoemulsions | 1443 nm |
Slower release rate during 20 days storage at 30 °C | [ |
| Pectin with whey protein concentrate | Citrus high-methoxyl pectin (DE 71.1%) | Saffron extract | Double-layered emulsification and spray drying | Nanoparticles | Spherical, 482.3–536.3 nm | [ | |
| Cellulose | Microcrystalline cellulose | Ammonium persulfate hydrolysis | Cellulose nanocrystals | 1.2–2.9 µm |
Antimicrobial activity against | [ | |
| Cellulose | Bacterial cellulose produced by | Cinnamon essential oil | Emulsification | Cellulose nanocrystals | Spherical and rod-like, 350–550 nm |
Preparation of solid nanoparticles of biological origin as carriers of cinnamon essential oil that could be mixed directly into the food matrix or as films and coatings | [ |
| Cellulose with alginate beads | Cellulose nanocrystals | Thyme essential oil | Emulsification | Cellulose nanocrystals | <200 nm |
Antimicrobial effect against Reduction of the mesophilic total flora on ground meat, packed under vacuum in combination with gamma irradiation, during storage | [ |
| Cellulose | Cellulose nanocrystals extracted from pistachio shells | Peppermint oil | Drop-wise addition of a peppermint oil ethanolic solution in cellulose nanocrystals suspension | Cellulose nanocrystals | Rod-like and spherical, 36.6–55.5 nm |
Controlled release upon simulated saliva for 160 min | [ |
a Not mentioned.
Overview of different polymeric carriers that have been used for the encapsulation of various pure plant bioactive compounds, extracts and essential oils.
| Type of Polymeric Carrier | Encapsulated Material | Target of Encapsulation | Size of the Obtained Delivery System | Application | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Micelles | 10-Hydroxycamptothecin | Solubility, stability and controlled release | 340 nm | Inhibitory effect on the activity of glutathione S-transferase with enhanced pharmaco-kinetic and targeting in liver | [ |
| Micelles | Shikonin (from | Solubility, stability and controlled release | 53–98 nm | Targeting to breast cancer cells by temperature regulation | [ |
| Micelles | Solubility, stability and controlled release | 24.95 ± 0.34 nm | Antibacterial activity in an in vitro study against | [ | |
| Micelles | Bioavailability, solubility and stability | 252–55.74 nm | Anticancer properties as it inhibits the migration of cancer cells | [ | |
| Dendrimers (PAMAM) | Curcumin (from | Solubility and controlled release |
| Better effect on the antiproliferative activity against lung cancer cells | [ |
| Dendrimers (PAMAM) | Curcumin | Bioavailability, solubility | ~150 nm |
| [ |
| Dendrimer G2 | Curcumin | Solubility | 239 nm | Effective anti-Plasmodium compound—against malaria | [ |
| Dendrimers (PAMAM) | Silybin (from milk thistle plant) | Solubility, stability and controlled release |
| Drug solubilization/inherent dendrimer cytotoxicity was reduced | [ |
| Dendrimers (PAMAM) | Black carrot anthocyanins (from | Solubility, stability, biocompatibility and controlled release | 134.8 nm | Cytotoxicity against neuroblastoma cell line | [ |
| Dendrimers (PAMAM) | Liquiritin (from | Solubility, stability and biocompatibility | - a | Permeability of intestinal absorption | [ |
| Dendrimers (PAMAM) | Solubility, stability and volatility | 20–30 nm | Action against the fungus | [ | |
| Dendrimers | Controlled release | - a | Biopesticides | [ | |
| Nanoparticles |
| Controlled release | 217.1 ± 19.9 nm | In vitro anti-herpetic activity | [ |
| Nanocapsules (PLA) | Controlled release | 271.2 ± 13–1750 ± 305 nm | Antibacterial efficiency | [ | |
| Nanocapsules | - a | 235.9 nm | Oxidative stress | [ |
a Not mentioned.
Overview of different nanoemulsions that have been used for the encapsulation of various pure plant bioactive compounds, extracts and essential oils.
| Type of Nanoemulsion | Encapsulated Material | Target of Encapsulation | Size of the Obtained Delivery System | Application | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| W/O a | Hydroxysafflor yellow A | Bioavailability | 53.3 nm | Oral bioavailability | [ |
| O/W b | Emodin | Oral bioavailability | 116 ± 6.5 nm | Inhibition of UGT metabolism | [ |
| W/O a | Catechin | Bioavailability | 98.6 ± 1.01 nm | Photoprotection against UVA-induced oxidative stress | [ |
| W/O a and O/W b | Betulinic acid | Bioavailability and solubility | 150.3 ± 0.56 nm | Hepatoprotective and in vivo antioxidant efficacy activity | [ |
| O/W b | Curcumin | Oral bioavailability | 11.2 nm | Enhancement in Cmax | [ |
| W/O a | β-Elemene | Solubility | 52.68 nm | Antitumor activity | [ |
| O/W b | Quercetin | Bioavailability and solubility | 19.3 ± 0.17 nm | Contribute to preventing weight gain | [ |
| O/W/O | Quercetin | Bioavailability and solubility | 180–200 nm | (candidate for the treatment of obesity) | [ |
| O/W b | Curcumin and quercetin | Simultaneous drug administration and protection of the encapsulated compounds from degradation | 112.33 ± 1.51 nm | Protecting against lipid oxidation (chicken paté) | [ |
| O/W b | Curcumin and quercetin | Solubility, high encapsulation efficiency and long-term stability | 175.44 nm | Thermal stability, higher bioavailability and consequently drug effectiveness | [ |
| O/W b | Quercetin | Poor water solubility and high susceptibility to chemical degradation | 207–289 nm | Drug delivery system | [ |
| W/O a | Quercetin | Solubility | 38.9–266.67 nm | Antioxidant and antibacterial activity | [ |
| O/W b | Oregano oil | Solubility | 148 nm | Antimicrobial activity in food | [ |
| O/W b |
| Solubility | 125 nm | Larvicidal property against | [ |
| O/W b | Bioavailability and solubility | 181 nm (167.3–222.0 nm) | - c | [ | |
| O/W b | Solubility | 440 nm | Antimicrobial activity | [ | |
| - c | Anthocyanin | Bioavailability and stability | - c | Antimicrobial activity | [ |
| - c | 2,4,6-triphenylaniline (TPA) | Stability and bioavailability | - c | Therapeutic drug delivery system in diabetes mellitus | [ |
a Water-in-oil emulsion; b oil-in-water emulsion; c not mentioned.
Overview of different inorganic nanoparticles as carriers for pure plant bioactive compounds, extracts and essential oils.
| Inorganic Material | Core Material | Shape and Size of the Obtained Delivery System | Application | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Silver | Cavendish banana peels | Spherical, crystalline, 55 nm | Antimicrobial activity against | [ |
| Silver |
| Octahedral, 5–50 nm | Antimicrobial activity against | [ |
| Silver |
| Crystalline, 70–192 nm | Antibacterial activity against | [ |
| Silver | Tamarind fruit | Spherical, crystalline, 6–8 nm | Antibacterial activity against | [ |
| Silver | Cinnamon | Spherical, 50–70 nm | Antibacterial activity against | [ |
| Silver |
| Spherical, crystalline, <15 nm | Antibacterial activity against | [ |
| Silver | White tea leaves | Spherical, 19.8 nm | Antioxidant activity | [ |
| Silver |
| Spherical, hexagonal, <50 nm | Antimicrobial activity against | [ |
| Silver | Spherical, 59.7 nm | Antibacterial and cytotoxic activity | [ | |
| Silver | Curcumin | Spherical, polycrystalline, 25–35 nm | Antibacterial activity against | [ |
| Silver | Turmeric extracts | Spherical and quasi-spherical, crystalline, 18 nm | Antimicrobial activity against | [ |
| Silver |
| Spherical, 35 nm | Effect on the neurological enzyme acetylcholinesterase to predict its neurotoxicity | [ |
| Silver | Spherical, crystalline, 2–30 nm | Antioxidant and antibacterial activity against | [ | |
| Silver and gold | Quercetin | Crystalline 53 and 27, respectively | Anti-neuroinflammatory activity on BV-2 microglial cells | [ |
| Gold | Spherical, 15.6–28 nm | Antibacterial activity against | [ | |
| Gold | Spherical, crystalline, 10–60 nm | Cytotoxic activity against U87 glioblastoma cells under hyperglycemic condition | [ | |
| Gold |
| Spherical, 20–200 nm | Cytotoxic activity and catalytic properties | [ |
| Gold | Resveratrol | Spherical, crystalline, 14.9–16.1 nm | Anticancer activity against human breast, pancreatic and prostate cancer cells | [ |
| Gold | Spherical, crystalline, 15–45 nm | Anti-acute myeloid leukemia effect in a leukemic rodent model | [ | |
| Palladium | Spherical, crystalline, 10 nm | Catalytic activity for the Suzuki–Miyaura coupling in water | [ | |
| Palladium |
| Crystalline, 169.2 nm | Catalytic activity for C–C coupling and reduction reactions | [ |
| Titanium dioxide | Crystalline,19.8 nm | Antimicrobial activity against | [ | |
| Zinc oxide |
| Spherical, 70 nm | Antibacterial activity against microbes that cause urinary tract infections (e.g., | [ |
| Zinc oxide | Spherical, 3–68 nm | Antimicrobial activity against | [ | |
| Zinc oxide |
| Spherical, hexagonal, 17 nm | Antibacterial activity against | [ |
| Zinc oxide |
| - a | In vitro cytotoxic activity against two cancer cell lines, i.e., human colon adenocarcinoma Caco-2 and human lung adenocarcinoma A549 | [ |
a Not mentioned.