| Literature DB >> 36012381 |
Bogdan Neamtu1,2,3, Andreea Barbu1,4, Mihai Octavian Negrea2, Cristian Ștefan Berghea-Neamțu2,5, Dragoș Popescu2,6, Marius Zăhan4, Vioara Mireșan4.
Abstract
The following review is focused on carrageenan, a heteroglycan-based substance that is a very significant wound healing biomaterial. Every biomaterial has advantages and weaknesses of its own, but these drawbacks are typically outweighed by combining the material in various ways with other substances. Carrageenans' key benefits include their water solubility, which enables them to keep the wound and periwound damp and absorb the wound exudate. They have low cytotoxicity, antimicrobial and antioxidant qualities, do not stick to the wound bed, and hence do not cause pain when removed from the wounded region. When combined with other materials, they can aid in hemostasis. This review emphasizes the advantages of using carrageenan for wound healing, including the use of several mixes that improve its properties.Entities:
Keywords: biomaterial; carrageenan; heteroglycan; infection control; nanofibers; pharmacokinetic; wound healing
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36012381 PMCID: PMC9409225 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23169117
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 6.208
Figure 1Applications (blue background) and biological uses or properties (red background) of carrageenan-based formulations.
Figure 2The process of wound healing.
Figure 3Carrageenan structure.
General characteristics of carrageenans.
| Characteristics | Description | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Type | Sulfated polysaccharides | [ |
| Source | Red algae ( | [ |
| Structure | Alternating 3-linked b-D-galactopyranose (G-units) and 4-linked a-D-galactopyranose (D-units) or 4-linked 3,6-anhydro-a-D-galactopyranose (DA-units) | [ |
| Molecular weight | High and variable, | [ |
| Functional groups | 3,6-anhydrogalactose, ester sulfate, 3,6-anhydrogalactose-2-sulfate, and galactose-4-sulfate | [ |
| Solubility | Water-soluble, insoluble in organic solvents, oil or fats | [ |
| Gelation factors | Influenced by temperature, concentration, ions (Na+, K+, and Ca2+), and pH | [ |
| Swelling factors | Levels of hydrophilic sulfate groups, salt form, Fe3O4 nanoparticles, molecular weight | [ |
| Dissolution factors/time | Types/number of solutes present, temperature, carrageenan type, molecular weight, concentration; slow | [ |
Figure 4Carrageenan nanofibers electrospinning principle.
Biological effects of various types of carrageenans.
| CG Used | Technique | Studied Effects | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|
| OKC | K-CG oxidation—exposure to NaIO4 (1:0.5 ratio; at 40 °C; for 3 h; at pH 3), crosslinking with PVA and HA (HA:OKC:PVA—0:4:6; 1:3:6; 2:2:6; 3:1:6; 2.5:2.5:5; 3.5:3.5:3). Electrospinning: 5 mL syringe; 22G needle; 0.5 mL/h at 25 ± 2 °C; 10 cm tip-to-collector; 17.5 kV DC voltage | Antibacterial properties | [ |
| K-CG | Solvents: distilled H2O, with and without sonication; NaCl solution; crosslinking with fully or partially hydrolyzed PVA (PVA:K-CG 70:30) | Drug and nutrient delivery ability | [ |
| CMKC | Crosslinked with PVA; PVA:CMKC—1:0; 1:0.25; 1:0.4; 1:0.5; 1:0.75. Electrospinning: 19G needle; 1 mL/h at 20 ± 2 °C; 15 cm tip-to-collector 15 kV DC voltage | Cytocompatibility, biodegradability, cell growth, cell adhesion, adipose-derived stem cells’ response to osteogenic differentiation signals | [ |
| I-CG | Crosslinked with PVA and addition of graphene oxide (PVA:I-CG:GO—95:3:2). Electrospinning: 15 cm tip-to-collector 20 kV DC voltage | Wound healing, skin repair, antimicrobial properties | [ |
| I-CG | Crosslinking with polycaprolactone (PCL); PCL:I-CG—100:0; 95:5; 90:10; 85:15; 80:20; 0:100. Electrospinning: 10; 15; 18 cm tip-to-collector 20 kV DC voltage | Biocompatibility, bone tissue growth | [ |
| K-CG | Crosslinked with polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB) or polyhydroxybutyrate valerate (PHBV); PHB:K-CG and PHBV:K-CG—100:0; 90:10; 80:20; 70:30. Electrospinning: 1 mLSyringe dispensed at 3.5 mL/h (PHB/K-CG) and 3.0 mL/h (PHBV/K-CG); 15 cm tip-to-collector; 20 kV DC voltage | Bone tissue engineering | [ |
| K-CG | Crosslinked with PHB, caffeic acid (CA), and quaternized chitosan (QCh). Electrospinning: 2 mL/h; 15 cm tip-to-collector; 25 kV DC voltage | Antimicrobial and antioxidant properties | [ |
| K-CG | Crosslinked with polydioxanone (PDX); PDX:K-CG—100:0; 90:10; 80:20; 70:30. Electrospinning: 6 mL/h; 15 cm tip-to-collector; 25 kV DC voltage | Viability and differentiation of SaOS-2 preosteoblasts | [ |
Properties of carrageenan nanoparticle compositions.
| Nanoparticles Used | Application | Studied Properties | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chitosan capped sulfur particles and grapefruit seed extract | Hydrogel films | Wound healing effect, mechanical strength, increased swelling ratio and ultraviolet barrier properties, decreased water vapor permeability and water solubility | [ |
| Polydopamine modified ZnO nanoparticles | Sprayable bioadhesive hydrogel | Mechanical, antibacterial, and cellular properties, blood clotting ability, and biocompatibility | [ |
| L-glutamic acid | Sprayable bioadhesive hydrogel | Wound healing | [ |
| 2D-nanosilicates | Injectable hydrogels for cellular delivery for cartilage tissue regeneration and 3D bioprinting | Shear-thinning characteristics, enhanced mechanical stiffness, elastomeric properties, and physiological stability | [ |
| 2D-nanosilicates | Injectable hydrogels for hemostasis and tissue regeneration | Mechanical properties, stiffness, protein adsorption, cell adhesion and spreading, increased platelet binding and reduced blood clotting time. | [ |
| 2D-nanosilicates | Bone-cartilage interface tissue engineering | Shear-thinning characteristics, increased the mechanical stiffness, mechanical properties, microstructures, cell adhesion characteristics | [ |
| Dopamine functionalized graphene oxide | Injectable hydrogels | Compressive strength and toughness, enhanced in vitro fibroblast proliferation and spreading | [ |
| Halloysite nanotubes | Nanocomposite film for tissue engineering | Biocompatibility, mechanical properties, cellular functions | [ |
| Whitlockite nanoparticles | Injectable hydrogels | Mechanical stability, biocompatibility, protein adsorption, stimulation of osteogenesis and angiogenesis | [ |
| Hydroxyapatite nanoparticles | Sustained release drug delivery hydrogels | Sustained release of hydrogel-loaded ciprofloxacin as opposed to burst-release of other hydrogels | [ |
| Gold particles | Injectable hydrogels | Electrical conductance, cell growth, and attachment | [ |
| Gold particles | Drug delivery hydrogels | Drug release kinetics (diclofenac sodium) | [ |
| Magnetic nanofillers (Fe3O4 nanoparticles) | Drug delivery hydrogels | Drug release kinetics (methylene blue, diclofenac sodium) | [ |
| MgO nanoparticles | Drug delivery hydrogels | Drug release kinetics (methylene blue) | [ |
| Super paramagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles | Drug delivery hydrogels | Stimulus-dependent (magnetic field, temperature, and pH-sensitive) drug release, biocompatibility | [ |
| CaCO3 -based nanoporous microparticles | Cancer cell targeting drug delivery nanocomposites | Drug release and cell targeting capabilities (doxorubicin) | [ |
| Maghemite | Drug delivery nanocomposites | Drug delivery in cancer therapy, biocompatibility | [ |
| Selenium | Nanocomposite for tissue engineering | Biochemical properties, osteoblast cell growth | [ |
| Silver particles | Hydrogel beads | Antibacterial activity, biological safety | [ |
| Silver particles | Wound dressing | Antimicrobial effectiveness and physical properties | [ |
| ZnO, CuO | Hydrogel and dry films | Mechanical, UV-screening, water-holding, thermal stability, and antimicrobial properties | [ |
| Silver particles and divalent cations (MgCl2, CuCl2, CaCl2) | Wound dressing material | Biocompatibility, tissue regeneration | [ |
| Cellulose nanocrystals and silver nanoparticles | Wound dressing material | Mechanical characteristics, nanocomposite drug release, antimicrobial properties | [ |
Biological characteristics of carrageenans.
| Properties | Description | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Formulations | 3D scaffolds, beads, drug-loaded plasticized films, fibers, gels, hydrogels, nanofibers, nanoparticles, PVP-KCG, three-layered matrix, and sponges | [ |
| Topical biocompatibility | Low toxicity but non-teratogenic, may cause inflammation and adverse effects on human intestinal epithelial cells | [ |
| Local properties | Drug delivery, anticoagulant, anti-HIV, antioxidant, antithrombotic, antitumor, and antiviral effect | [ |
| Mechanisms | Super case II release mechanism; hydrolysis of glycosidic bonds at pH ≤ 3.0; desulfation by sulfatases; anionic CG molecules interact with the positively charged virus or cell surface | [ |
| Immunogenicity | Interfere with antigens lowering the normal immune function | [ |
| Anti-infectious properties | Bacteriostatic: | [ |
| Anti-inflammatory properties | Induce inflammation (paw edema), but interfere with NSAIDs. | [ |
| 3D scaffolds | Alginate–carrageenan mix, gelatin/K-CG sponges, K-CG/calcium phosphate, hydrogel beads and fibers, metoprolol tartrate delivery in 3-layered matrix tablets, PVP-KCG | [ |
| Elimination | Fecal elimination after oral intake | [ |