| Literature DB >> 35049712 |
Alfred Mensah1, Yajun Chen1, Narh Christopher1, Qufu Wei1.
Abstract
This report summarizes efforts undertaken in the area of drug delivery, with a look at further efforts made in the area of bacterial cellulose (BC) biomedical applications in general. There are many current methodologies (past and present) for the creation of BC membrane composites custom-engineered with drug delivery functionality, with brief consideration for very close applications within the broader category of biomedicine. The most emphasis was placed on the crucial aspects that open the door to the possibility of drug delivery or the potential for use as drug carriers. Additionally, consideration has been given to laboratory explorations as well as already established BC-drug delivery systems (DDS) that are either on the market commercially or have been patented in anticipation of future commercialization. The cellulose producing strains, current synthesis and growth pathways, critical aspects and intrinsic morphological features of BC were given maximum consideration, among other crucial aspects of BC DDS.Entities:
Keywords: bacterial cellulose; critical aspects; drug delivery systems; membrane technology; modification pathways
Year: 2021 PMID: 35049712 PMCID: PMC8772700 DOI: 10.3390/bioengineering9010003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bioengineering (Basel) ISSN: 2306-5354
Figure 1Chemical structure of Bacterial cellulose.
Commercial bacterial cellulose products available on the market [11,20].
| Commercial Product Name | Clinical Utilization | Form for Usage | Company/Agency |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bio Fill® | Burns | Wound care systems | Robin goad, Milwaukee, WI, USA |
| Cellulon® | Medical applications including non-woven structures | Binder | CP Kelco, Atlanta, GA, USA |
| Basyc® | CABG (Coronary artery bypass surgery) | Vessel implants (tubes) | Jenpolymer materials Ltd. & co., Jena, Germany |
| Bioprocess® | Burns | Artificial skin | Biofill Produtos Biotechnologicos, São Paulo, Brazil |
| Dermafill® | Burns | Wound care dressing | Fibrocel Produtos Biotechnologicos Ltd.a, Ibipora, PR, Brazil |
| Cellulon PX microfibrous cellulose® | Suspensions of particles, encapsulated enzymes | Suspending agent | CP Kelco, Atlanta, GA, USA |
| Gengiflex® | Periodentitis | Non-resorbable cellulose membrane | Biofill Produtos Biotechnologicos, São Paulo, Brazil |
| CelMat ® MG & CelM®(R) MG | Protection for miners from potential burns | Protective dressings/jackets | Government of Poland, Warsaw, Poland |
| Securian® | Tendon repair | Tissue reinforcement matrix | Xylos corporation, Langhorne, PA, USA |
| MTA protective tissue | Injury and wound care | Biocompatible implant | Xylos corporation, Langhorne, PA, USA |
| Membracell® | Ulcers, burns, lacerations | Temporary skin substitute | Vuelo Pharma, Curitiba, PR, Brazil |
| Xcell® | Venous ulcer wounds | Wound care | XCELL BIOLOGIX, Kennesaw, GA, USA |
| Bionext® | Ulcers, burns, lacerations | Wound dressing | Bionext Produtos Biotechnologicos, Pacaembu, São Paulo, Brazil |
Drug delivery patents on BC [20].
| Invention Field | Patent Title | Patent Number | Registration |
|---|---|---|---|
| Calcium alginate capsules embedded and prepared in situ; containing drugs and probiotics | Bacterial cellulose composite with capsules embedded therein and preparation thereof | US 2012308649A1 | United states patent and trade mark office (USPTO) |
| Implantable device; soft tissue repair-drug delivery carriers | A method for producing implantable microbial cellulose materials for various medical applications | EP1795213 B1 (Heather Beam et al.) | European patent office |
| Network meshed hydrogel, drug delivery carrier, skin substitute | Novel network meshed hydrogel structure | TW M428771U1 (Yung Kai Lin, Che Yung Kuan) | Intellectual Property Office Taiwan (TIPO) |
| Implantable bacterial cellulose; in-vivo application | Thermally modified microbial-derived cellulose for in-vivo implantation | EP1662976 A2 US20050042250 US8198261, (Ann Hethearbeam et al.) | USPTO, 2006 & EPO, 2005 |
| Use of microbial (bacterial) cellulose in transdermal drug delivery | Microbial cellulose materials for use in transdermal drug delivery systems, method of manufacture and use | US 20060240084 (Serafica et al.) | USPTO, 2006 |
| Cellulose hydrogels, making and applications; implant and ocular devices; sustained release drug delivery systems | Cellulose-based hydrogels and methods of making thereof | US20130032059 A1 (Morgana M Trexeler et al.) | USPTO 2013 |
| Medical implant; orthopeaedic | Medical device including bacterial cellulose reinforced by resorbable or non-resorbable materials | US 20110262521A1 (Bayon et al.) | USPTO, 2011 |
| Wide range of applications, dependent on density gradient dictated by thickness; number of drugs can be delivered | Bacterial cellulose films and uses thereof | EP 2390344 A1 US20110286948 (Mei-Ling Lee et al.) | EPO, 2011 USPTO, 2011 |
Figure 2BC membrane technologies for drug delivery systems.
Figure 3The unique properties of bacterial cellulose.
Figure 4Illustration of the critical aspects vital for BC-DDS and biomedical applications.
Cellulose-producing bacteria strains that have been heavily studied [84,87,122].
| Strain | Carbon Source | Production Quantity (g/L) | Incubation Mode | Duration of Incubation | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| G. | Fructose | 14.1 | Agitated | 3 days | [ |
| G. | Glucose | 15.3 | Fed-batch/agitated | 2 days | [ |
| G. | TS-Glu | 10.38 | Static | 7 days | [ |
| A. | CSL-Fru | 13 | Agitated | 5 days | [ |
|
| (Fiber sludge) Hydrolysates | 6.23 | Static | 14 days | [ |
|
| Syrup | 43.5 | Static | 14 days | [ |
|
| Fructose | 8.7 | Static | 44h | [ |
|
| Glucose | 10.1 | Static/agitated | 7 days | [ |
|
| Glucose | 4.16 | agitated | 8 days | [ |
|
| Glucose | 15.2 | agitated | 8 days | [ |
|
| Sugar cane molasses | 5.76 | Static/agitated | 7 days | [ |
| Co-culture of | Sucrose | 4.2 | agitated | 3days | [ |
| and | |||||
|
| Glucose | 2.5 | Static | 3days | [ |
|
| Pineapple waste medium | 28.3 | Rotary disc reactor | 4 days | [ |
|
| Glucose | 0.15 | Five-stage horizontal | 68 h | K Toda, J Koizumi, T Asakura—1994 |
| flow reactor | |||||
|
| Corn steep liquor-fructose (CSL-Fru) | 3.8 | Airlift reactor | 67h | [ |
| medium | |||||
|
| Galactose + Sucrose | 7.67 | Static | 14 days | [ |
| Galactose + Lactose, | 6.89 | ||||
| Galactose + Maltose, | 6.28 | ||||
| Galactose + Fructose | 5.82 | ||||
| Molasses + HS medium | 5.75 | ||||
| Watermelon + HS medium | 5.98 | ||||
| Orange juice + HS medium | 6.18 | ||||
| Muskmelon + HS medium | 8.08 | ||||
| Coconut water + HS medium |
Figure 5General biosynthesis path of bacterial cellulose.
Figure 6Visualization of various biosynthesis paths of bacterial cellulose. (A) Bacterial cellulosic (BC) pocket synthesis mechanism reported by Narh et. al. [138]. (B) Synthesis of 6CF-BC based on an in situ microbial fermentation method reported by Gao and co. [139]. (C) Pathways for the biosynthesis of BC by K. xylinus and the assembly of cellulose molecules into nanofibrils reported by Jacek et al. [140].
BC Cultivation approaches. Adapted with permission from [122].
| Production Method | Description | Advantage | Disadvantage | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Static culture | -All media ingredients are mixed together at the early stage | -Simple process | -Laborious and time consuming | All references can be found in [ |
| -Production occurs in tray | -Does not require complex instruments | -Fermentation condition cannot be controlled or monitored | ||
| -Production occurs at air-liquid medium interface | -Cellulose formed as pellicle, sometimes as reticulated cellulose | |||
| slurry | ||||
| -Not applicable for large-scale production | ||||
| Static intermittent fed batch technology | Definite amount of fresh media provided over growing | Simple process | -Fermentation condition cannot be monitored | |
| pellicle in intermittent time periods | -Highly enhanced production as compared to | -Cellulose formed as pellicle, sometimes as reticulated cellulose | ||
| standard static method | slurry | |||
| -Can be applied for large scale production | ||||
| Cell-free extract technology | Mechanical/thermal/enzymatic cell lysis releases all the | Simple process | No control over fermentation parameters | |
| necessary enzymes required for BNC production directly | -Can be applied for large scale production in | |||
| into the media | short time | |||
| -Better yield | ||||
| Agitated culture | -Reciprocal shaking at about 90–100 rpm | -Applicable for large scale production | -Cellulose not formed in pellicle form but as irregular shape | |
| -Agitation allows cells to grow more rapidly | -Surmount many limitations in static culture | sphere-like cellulose particle | ||
| including diffusion, controllability and scale-up | -Agitation often result in culture mutation resulting in low | |||
| productivity | ||||
| -Problem with culture instability which demonstrated by loss of | ||||
| ability to make cellulose | ||||
| Bioreactor based production e.g., Rotary disc | New alternative using concept of Rotating Biological | -High productivity | ||
| reactor, Air lift reactor | Contactor (RBC) | -Less labor needed | -No disadvantage (if culture conditions are properly maintained | |
| -It used discs that alternately soak the organisms in nutrient | -Easy scale-up | and suitable medium is used then high productivity can be | ||
| medium and expose them to air | achieved) |
Figure 7Illustration of a wound cover made from modified bacterial cellulose for dental therapies. Adapted with permission from [158].
Figure 8Illustration of bacterial cellulose/graphene oxide nanocomposite as a novel drug delivery system: (A) SEM images showing the unique morphological features with the 3D structure: (a), IBU@BC (b), IBU@BC/GO-1 (c and d), and IBU@BC/GO-2 (e and f) (red arrows indicate IBU and yellow arrows indicate GO).; (B) the mechanism of surface interactions between the BC/GO and IBU drug models. Adapted with permission from [159].
Figure 9Presentation of bacterial cellulosic pocket synthesis mechanism and inulin conformation. Pocket dimensions and morphology are well illustrated: (A) is the inulin D-fructose molecule in all-trans conformation of ϕ = Ψ = ω = 180 while (B) is the ring puckering with C3 atom displacement. (C) is the proposed inulin conformation chain X-Y whereas (D) represents the Y-Z planes. Adapted with permission from [138].
Figure 10Images adapted from key studies using the ex-situ (ExSUP) modification method. (A) SEM micrograph of bacterial cellulose and BC sheets treated with lidocaine hydrochloride (middle) and ibuprofen (right); adapted with permission from [16]. (B) Visual aspect of dried BC and BC-Gly membranes and Sequential steps of the patch test using Finn Chambers; adapted with permission from [30]. (C) Schematic diagram illustrating the overall process of surface modification and drug loading and Images of BC matrices in (a) as-synthesized, (b) drug loaded, surface modified and oven dried and (c) drug loaded, surface modified and freeze-dried form; adapted with permission from [168].
Figure 11Images adapted from key studies using the ex-situ (ExSUP) modification method. (A) Fabrication of BC/alginate composites, image of final membrane and SEM image; adapted with permission from [172]. (B) Reaction schemes of the two protocols used for the silylation of BC with APS and AEAPS and SEM micrographs of composites; adapted with permission from [33]. (C) Chitosan-bacterial cellulose patch of ciprofloxacin for wound dressing, images observed with an epifluorescent microscope and SEM images; adapted with permission from [171].
Figure 12Images adapted from key studies using the ex situ “suspension/solution” (ExSSuSol) modification method. (A) BC/gelatin hydrogel composite formulation for drug delivery; adapted with permission from [176] (B) Purification, characterization and comparative studies of spray-dried BC microparticles; adapted with permission from [149] (C). Curcumin entrapped in gelatin/ionically modified BC-based self-healable hydrogel film adapted with permission from [177].
Figure 13Image of novel MgO-BC nanohybrids prepared by in-situ and ex-situ methods using the hybrid modification method; Adapted with permission from [147].
Preparation methods and strategies for BC DDS membranes.
| Mode of Modification | BC Strain and Drug Model | Intrinsic Feature | Final Application | DD Route | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| In situ | Fleece-like appearance | Wound dressing and dental therapies | Transmucosal delivery | [ | |
| In situ | Bead-like spheres with BC/GO porous structure | General carrier | Potentially for transdermal and transmucosal drug delivery | [ | |
| In situ |
| Pockets | Drug carrier | For transdermal and transmucosal drug delivery | [ |
| In situ |
| 3D microfibres | Dressers for wounds, burns and ulcers | Transdermal | [ |
| In situ | Nanotextured fibrils | Varied applications | Mainly transdermal | [ | |
| In situ | Nanotextured fibrils | Blood vessels | Potentially for transdermal and transmucosal drug delivery | [ | |
| Ex situ (ExSUP) | 3D microfibrils | Drug carrier absorb exudates | Transdermal | [ | |
| Ex situ (ExSUP) | 3D microfibrils | Skin therapy | Transdermal | [ | |
| Ex situ (ExSUP) | 3D microfibrils | Varied applications | Potentially for transdermal delivery | [ | |
| Ex situ (ExSUP) | 3D microfibrils | Varied applications | Potentially for transdermal delivery | [ | |
| Ex situ (ExSUP) | Nano-spheres with 3D microfibrils of BC | Wound dressing for diabetic foot ulcer (DFU) | Transdermal delivery | [ | |
| Ex situ (ExSUP) | Nano cavities with BC microfibrils | Bioabsorbable membrane/periodontal treatment | Potentially for transdermal and transmucosal drug delivery | [ | |
| Ex situ (ExSUP) | 3D microfibrils | Wound healing | Transdermal delivery | [ | |
| Ex situ (ExSUP) | 3D microfibrils | Wound treatments | Transdermal delivery | [ | |
| Ex situ (ExSUP) | 3D microfibrils | Wound dressing | Transdermal delivery | [ | |
| Ex situ (ExSUP) | Nanotextured fibrils | Wound treatments | Transdermal delivery | [ | |
| Ex situ (ExSUP) | 3D nanotextured fibrils | Anti-bacterial activity | Transdermal delivery | [ | |
| Ex situ (ExSSuSol) | Spherical porous structure | Drug carriers | Transdermal and transmucosal drug delivery | [ | |
| Ex situ | Spherical (bead-like) nanocrystals | Drug carriers | Transdermal and transmucosal drug delivery | [ | |
| Ex situ | Sponge-like structure | Drug carriers | Potentially for transdermal and transmucosal drug delivery | [ | |
| Ex situ | Spherical (bead-like) nanocrystals | Drug carriers | Transdermal and transmucosal drug delivery | [ | |
| Hybrid pathway | Leaf-shaped | Clinical wound healing | Transdermal delivery | [ |