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32 pages, 4392 KB  
Review
Genomic Monitoring and Engineering Stable and Safe Immortalized Cell Platforms for Industrial Cellular Agriculture
by Karine R. D. Silveira, Vanessa Haach and Ana Paula Bastos
Foods 2026, 15(12), 2218; https://doi.org/10.3390/foods15122218 - 19 Jun 2026
Viewed by 299
Abstract
Cultivated-meat production relies on robust animal cell-line engineering, scalable tissue-engineering strategies, and clearly defined regulatory standards. This review examines the developmental pipeline from primary tissue biopsy to large-scale expansion and regulatory evaluation, focusing on stable and safe immortalized cell platforms. We compare muscle [...] Read more.
Cultivated-meat production relies on robust animal cell-line engineering, scalable tissue-engineering strategies, and clearly defined regulatory standards. This review examines the developmental pipeline from primary tissue biopsy to large-scale expansion and regulatory evaluation, focusing on stable and safe immortalized cell platforms. We compare muscle satellite cells, mesenchymal stromal/adipogenic progenitors and induced pluripotent stem cells, highlighting trade-offs among proliferative capacity, lineage commitment, genomic stability, and food-safety considerations. We then analyze immortalization strategies, including spontaneous senescence bypass, telomerase reactivation and CRISPR-based checkpoint modulation, highlighting their impact on genomic stability and food-safety risks. Recent advances in serum-free media, extracellular matrix-mimetic biomaterials and staged co-culture protocols have enabled centimeter-scale tissues with improved texture and marbling; however, cost, reproducibility and scalability remain bottlenecks. Integrating multi-omics surveillance with life-cycle assessment reveals that environmental benefits (land, water and antibiotic reduction) are attainable only when energy inputs and growth-factor sourcing are optimized. Finally, we examine regulatory frameworks that distinguish food-grade immortalized cells from pharmaceutical substrates and genetically modified crops. By integrating cell biology, animal biotechnology, and bioprocess engineering, this review identifies technical priorities for advancing cultivated meat from laboratory development to industrial implementation, positioning genomic monitoring as an essential framework for assessing biological stability, functional predictability, and food-production suitability. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Recent Advances in Sustainable Food Manufacturing)
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22 pages, 5259 KB  
Article
Conformational Preferences of the Trypanocidal Drug Benznidazole by DFT-Guided Vibrational Spectroscopy
by Eveline M. Bezerra, Pedro N. Silva Junior, Taciano A. Sorrentino, Francisco A. M. Sales, Alice M. C. Martins, Ricardo P. Santos, Ewerton W. S. Caetano, Valder N. Freire and Roner F. da Costa
Biophysica 2026, 6(3), 39; https://doi.org/10.3390/biophysica6030039 - 7 May 2026
Viewed by 386
Abstract
Chagas disease remains a major neglected parasitic illness in Latin America and other endemic regions, and benznidazole (BZN) is still the primary trypanosomacidal drug despite its incompletely understood mechanism of action. This work provides a detailed biophysical characterization of the conformational behavior and [...] Read more.
Chagas disease remains a major neglected parasitic illness in Latin America and other endemic regions, and benznidazole (BZN) is still the primary trypanosomacidal drug despite its incompletely understood mechanism of action. This work provides a detailed biophysical characterization of the conformational behavior and vibrational properties of benznidazole (BZN), a first-line trypanocidal drug still widely used for the treatment of Chagas disease. Using density functional theory combined with relaxed potential energy surface scans in vacuum and implicit water, two low-energy conformers (BZN1 and BZN2) were identified, separated by moderate rotational barriers and a small energy difference, indicating that both are intrinsically accessible at room temperature. For each conformer, infrared and Raman spectra were calculated and assigned via vibrational mode analysis, then compared with FT-IR and FT-Raman spectra recorded for pharmaceutical-grade polycrystalline BZN. The theoretical and experimental spectra show excellent agreement, with a Raman band in the 1350–1400 cm1 region emerging as a sensitive conformational marker: the experimental maximum at 1359cm1 matches the most intense BZN1 mode, whereas the corresponding BZN2 band appears about 13cm1 higher in frequency. This clear spectroscopic fingerprint demonstrates that the solid drug is overwhelmingly composed of the BZN1 conformer, despite the theoretical accessibility of BZN2. Overall, the study links the conformational landscape of benznidazole to its vibrational signatures and highlights Raman spectroscopy, supported by quantum chemical calculations, as a powerful tool for conformational and potential polymorphic control of this clinically important nitroimidazole. Full article
(This article belongs to the Collection Feature Papers in Biophysics)
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22 pages, 5311 KB  
Article
Learning to Argue: How Do 4th and 6th Grade Students Use Multimodal Materials to Solve a Socioscientific Issue?
by Nuria Fernández-Huetos, José Manuel Pérez-Martín, Tamara Esquivel-Martín and Irene Guevara-Herrero
Educ. Sci. 2026, 16(2), 321; https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci16020321 - 16 Feb 2026
Viewed by 790
Abstract
In light of the current eco-social crisis, environmental education must adopt a transformative, critical literacy-based approach grounded in scientific practices to prepare students to address socioenvironmental issues from a systemic perspective. This study, which was conducted with 4th and 6th-grade primary school students [...] Read more.
In light of the current eco-social crisis, environmental education must adopt a transformative, critical literacy-based approach grounded in scientific practices to prepare students to address socioenvironmental issues from a systemic perspective. This study, which was conducted with 4th and 6th-grade primary school students (aged 9–12), presents the results of an activity based on a socioscientific issue about the presence of pharmaceuticals in surface water. The aim is to evaluate students’ performance in argumentation, their use of and understanding of the materials from which they extract evidence, and the solutions they propose. To this end, the content (written reports) and discourse (group discussions) were analyzed, and different statistical tests were carried out to compare individual and group performance, as well as performance among educational levels. The results show students in both years tend to perform at a low-to-medium level, with higher performance in 6th grade, but there are no significant differences in most areas. They also use materials in different semiotic modalities; similarly, they experience more difficulty with maps and graphs than with texts and videos. Additionally, they propose solutions from various perspectives. Overall, this approach contributes to the development of scientific reasoning in primary school students and should therefore be incorporated into their classroom culture. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section STEM Education)
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17 pages, 6231 KB  
Article
Circular Economy Pathways for Pharmaceutical Packaging Waste in Wood-Based Panels—A Preliminary Study
by Alexandrina Kostadinova-Slaveva, Ekaterina Todorova, Viktor Savov and Savina Brankova
J. Compos. Sci. 2025, 9(12), 679; https://doi.org/10.3390/jcs9120679 - 7 Dec 2025
Viewed by 1370
Abstract
This preliminary study investigates a direct, non-delaminated route to valorize multilayer pharmaceutical sachet offcuts (comprising paper/plastic/aluminum) as partial substitutes for wood fiber in wood-based panels. Milled offcuts were incorporated at 10, 20, and 30 wt% (control: wood only). Laboratory mats were hot-pressed at [...] Read more.
This preliminary study investigates a direct, non-delaminated route to valorize multilayer pharmaceutical sachet offcuts (comprising paper/plastic/aluminum) as partial substitutes for wood fiber in wood-based panels. Milled offcuts were incorporated at 10, 20, and 30 wt% (control: wood only). Laboratory mats were hot-pressed at 170 °C for 9 min under a staged pressure regime. Sampling and three-point bending were performed according to EN 326-1 and EN 310, respectively, with the density held essentially constant by controlling the mat mass and press stops. Bending stiffness (MOE) was maintained at 10–20 wt% (within experimental uncertainty of the reference), while 30 wt% showed a consistent downward trend (approximately 10%). Bending strength (MOR) peaked at 10 wt% (approximately 8% higher than the reference), then declined at 20% and 30%. Representative stress–strain curves corroborated these outcomes, indicating auxiliary bonding and crack-bridging effects at low waste loadings. Hygroscopic performance improved monotonically: 24 h water absorption and thickness swelling decreased progressively with increasing substitution, attributable to the hydrophobic polymer layers and aluminum fragments interrupting capillary pathways. Process observations identified opportunities to improve press-cycle efficiency at higher waste contents, and the dispersed foil imparted a subtle decorative sheen. Overall, the results establish the technical feasibility and a practical utilization window of approximately 10–20 wt% for furniture-grade applications. Limitations include the laboratory scale, a single resin/press schedule, and the absence of internal bond, density profile, emissions, and long-term durability tests—topics prioritized for future work (including TGA/DSC, EN 317 extensions, and scale-up). Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Composites Applications)
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39 pages, 8342 KB  
Systematic Review
Hydroxypropyl Cellulose Research over Two Decades (2005–2024): A Systematic Review with Bibliometric Analysis and Translational Insights
by Derina Paramitasari, Okta Amelia, Karjawan Pudjianto, Musa Musa, Banon Rustiaty, Arni Supriyanti, Dyah Primarini Meidiawati, Okta Nama Putra, Yanuar Sigit Pramana, Yassaroh Yassaroh, Frita Yuliati, Jatmiko Eko Witoyo and Untia Kartika Sari
Polysaccharides 2025, 6(4), 104; https://doi.org/10.3390/polysaccharides6040104 - 14 Nov 2025
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 2806
Abstract
Hydroxypropyl cellulose (HPC) is a versatile cellulose ether with two standardized forms: highly substituted (H-HPC), which is water-soluble and thermoresponsive, and low-substituted (L-HPC), which is insoluble but swellable. This systematic review with bibliometric analysis aimed to map the global HPC research landscape (2005–2024), [...] Read more.
Hydroxypropyl cellulose (HPC) is a versatile cellulose ether with two standardized forms: highly substituted (H-HPC), which is water-soluble and thermoresponsive, and low-substituted (L-HPC), which is insoluble but swellable. This systematic review with bibliometric analysis aimed to map the global HPC research landscape (2005–2024), focusing on publication trends, research impact, and thematic directions. Original research articles and conference proceedings indexed in Scopus were included, while reviews and non-research items were excluded. The database was searched on 7 July 2025 using predefined strategies and analyzed using Excel for descriptive statistics and VOSviewer for network visualization. Risk of bias assessment was not applicable; data accuracy was ensured through duplicate removal and the use of standardized bibliometric indicators. A total of 1273 H-HPC and 92 L-HPC publications were analyzed. H-HPC research dominates multidisciplinary applications in drug delivery, 3D printing, thermochromic, and energy materials, whereas L-HPC remains focused on pharmaceutical disintegration and binding. Nevertheless, the field is constrained by reliance on commercial grades and a narrow application focus, leaving broader material innovations underexplored. HPC is positioned as a strategic polysaccharide derivative with expanding translational potential. Future studies should emphasize greener synthesis, advanced functionalization, and industrial scale-up. Funding: Supported by BRIN. Systematic review registration: INPLASY202590019. Full article
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31 pages, 924 KB  
Review
Soilless Growing Media for Cannabis Cultivation
by Matěj Malík and Pavel Tlustoš
Agriculture 2025, 15(18), 1955; https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture15181955 - 16 Sep 2025
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 6259
Abstract
Standardized pharmaceutical-grade cultivation of Cannabis sativa L. increasingly relies on soilless systems for precision, reproducibility, and regulatory compliance. This review examines the role of inert and semi-inert growing media in indoor cannabis production, focusing on their physical properties, agronomic performance, and sustainability. A [...] Read more.
Standardized pharmaceutical-grade cultivation of Cannabis sativa L. increasingly relies on soilless systems for precision, reproducibility, and regulatory compliance. This review examines the role of inert and semi-inert growing media in indoor cannabis production, focusing on their physical properties, agronomic performance, and sustainability. A systematic literature search was conducted using databases such as Scopus, Web of Science, and Google Scholar, emphasizing peer-reviewed original research, experimental trials, and relevant review articles. Evaluated substrates include rockwool, coconut coir, peat-based blends, perlite, vermiculite, expanded clay, foamed glass, phenolic foam, and biochar. Findings show that substrate selection strongly affects vegetative growth, rooting, and flower yield, while cannabinoid concentrations remain primarily genotype-driven under stable environmental and nutritional conditions. Substrate-specific traits such as aeration, water-holding capacity, and nutrient buffering significantly influence biomass production and resource-use efficiency. Rockwool remains the industry standard due to its uniformity and compatibility with fertigation systems, but renewable alternatives like coconut coir and biochar are gaining traction. This review underscores the importance of substrate selection in cannabis cultivation and identifies research gaps in genotype-specific responses and the development of sustainable growing media. Full article
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16 pages, 2255 KB  
Article
Exploring the Functional Potential of the Xyrophytic Greek Carob (Ceratonia siliqua, L.) Cold Aqueous and Hydroethanolic Extracts
by Katerina Pyrovolou, Panagiota-Kyriaki Revelou, Maria Trapali, Irini F. Strati, Spyros J. Konteles, Petros A. Tarantilis and Anthimia Batrinou
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(16), 8909; https://doi.org/10.3390/app15168909 - 13 Aug 2025
Viewed by 1730
Abstract
The present study investigates the antimicrobial, antioxidant, and in vitro antidiabetic potential of cold infusions prepared from different parts of the Greek carob tree (Ceratonia siliqua L.), which is a xerophytic species. Carob samples, including green and ripe pods and leaves, were [...] Read more.
The present study investigates the antimicrobial, antioxidant, and in vitro antidiabetic potential of cold infusions prepared from different parts of the Greek carob tree (Ceratonia siliqua L.), which is a xerophytic species. Carob samples, including green and ripe pods and leaves, were collected from an urban area of Attica, Greece, and extracted using food-grade solvents (water and a water–ethanol mixture, 90:10, v/v). The extracts were evaluated for antibacterial activity against Escherichia coli ATCC 25922 and Staphylococcus aureus ATCC 6538 using automated turbidometry. In addition, total phenolic content and antioxidant and antiradical activities were determined via spectrophotometry; the phenolic profile was analyzed using liquid chromatography coupled with quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometry (LC-QToF-MS), and α-amylase inhibitory activity was assessed through an in vitro assay. All extracts exhibited statistically significant (p < 0.05) bacteriostatic effects, with green pods and leaves showing the highest activity. Ripe pods demonstrated the most potent α-amylase inhibition (up to 96.43%), especially when extracted with water–ethanol mixture (90:10, v/v). Liquid chromatography coupled with tandem quadrupole/time-of-flight mass spectrometry (LC-QToF-MS) analysis revealed a rich phenolic profile across all samples. While carob leaves showed no α-amylase inhibition, their phenolic profile suggests other potential health-related bioactivities. These findings support the development of carob-based functional food products and highlight the nutritional and pharmaceutical potential of this resilient Mediterranean crop. Full article
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25 pages, 5607 KB  
Article
Hydroxypropyl Cellulose Polymers as Efficient Emulsion Stabilizers: The Effect of Molecular Weight and Overlap Concentration
by Diana Cholakova, Krastina Tsvetkova, Viara Yordanova, Kristina Rusanova, Nikolai Denkov and Slavka Tcholakova
Gels 2025, 11(2), 113; https://doi.org/10.3390/gels11020113 - 5 Feb 2025
Cited by 5 | Viewed by 4898
Abstract
Hydroxypropyl cellulose (HPC) is a non-digestible water-soluble polysaccharide used in various food, cosmetic, and pharmaceutical applications. In the current study, the aqueous solutions of six HPC grades, with molecular mass ranging from 40 to 870 kDa, were characterized with respect to their precipitation [...] Read more.
Hydroxypropyl cellulose (HPC) is a non-digestible water-soluble polysaccharide used in various food, cosmetic, and pharmaceutical applications. In the current study, the aqueous solutions of six HPC grades, with molecular mass ranging from 40 to 870 kDa, were characterized with respect to their precipitation temperatures, interfacial tensions (IFTs), rheological properties and emulsifying and stabilization ability in palm (PO) and sunflower (SFO) oil emulsions. The main conclusions from the obtained results are as follows: (1) Emulsion drop size follows a master curve as a function of HPC concentration for all studied polymers, indicating that polymer molecular mass and solution viscosity have a secondary effect, while the primary effect is the fraction of surface-active molecules, estimated to be around 1–2% for all polymers. (2) Stable emulsions were obtained only with HPC polymers with Mw ≥ 400 kDa at concentrations approximately 3.5 times higher than the critical overlap concentration, c*. At PO concentrations beyond 40 wt. % or when the temperature was 25 °C, these emulsions appeared as highly viscous liquids or non-flowing gels. (3) HPC polymers with Mw < 90 kDa were unable to form stable emulsions, as the surface-active molecules cannot provide steric stabilization even at c ≳ 4–5 c*, resulting in drop creaming and coalescence during storage. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Food Gels: Gelling Process and Innovative Applications)
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13 pages, 895 KB  
Article
Use of Ozone for Disinfection of PHARMODUCT® Automatic System for Antineoplastic Compounding
by Vito Lovino, Antonio Riglietti, Anna Tolomeo, Giuseppe Capasso, Miriana Di Vittorio, Stefano Brattoli, Giuseppe Tesse, Vincenzo Dimiccoli, Marco Spartà and Luana Perioli
Pharmaceuticals 2025, 18(2), 140; https://doi.org/10.3390/ph18020140 - 22 Jan 2025
Viewed by 2435
Abstract
Background: The purpose of this work was to demonstrate the ozone efficacy for disinfection of the PHARMODUCT® automatic dispensing system for antineoplastic preparation, as a guarantee of a higher grade of cleanliness. While the use of ozone gas disinfection is almost consolidated [...] Read more.
Background: The purpose of this work was to demonstrate the ozone efficacy for disinfection of the PHARMODUCT® automatic dispensing system for antineoplastic preparation, as a guarantee of a higher grade of cleanliness. While the use of ozone gas disinfection is almost consolidated in food and water treatment, there is a lack of scientific data in the pharmaceutical field. The scope of this study was to demonstrate the ozone efficacy for disinfection of the PHARMODUCT® automatic dispensing system, before starting the antineoplastic preparation, in order to ensure a high degree of cleanliness and, at the same time, to define a biodecontamination procedure that could also be translatable to other automated compounding systems on the market. Methods: Ozone efficacy was determined by calculating the difference (pre-exposure–post-exposure) in CFU counts on the plate. A group of four different ATCC-selected microbial strains were tested using two distinct cycles. The first one was evaluated with an ozone gas concentration of 40 ppm for 40 min; the second cycle increased the concentration to 60 ppm for the same duration. Results: Results showed that exposure to 40 ppm ozone gas led to a 4-log reduction of all tested ATCC strains. In contrast, exposure to 60 ppm ensured a 6-log reduction. Conclusions: The ozone disinfection process, applied to the PHARMODUCT® system, provides a superior grade of cleanliness compared to the manual disinfection procedure, thus offering insight beyond the current anti-inflammatory and analgesic application of ozone therapy in the medical field. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Pharmaceutical Technology)
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18 pages, 7657 KB  
Article
Optimization and Evaluation of Cannabis-Based Magistral Formulations: A Path to Personalized Therapy
by Bożena Grimling, Magdalena Fast, Magdalena Okoniewska, Artur Owczarek and Bożena Karolewicz
Pharmaceuticals 2025, 18(1), 73; https://doi.org/10.3390/ph18010073 - 9 Jan 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 5429
Abstract
Introduction: The official implementation of pharmaceutical-grade cannabis raw materials for medicinal use has permitted doctors to prescribe and pharmacists to prepare cannabis-based formulations. The objective of the pharmaceutical development and manufacturing process optimization work was to propose a suppository formulation containing doses of [...] Read more.
Introduction: The official implementation of pharmaceutical-grade cannabis raw materials for medicinal use has permitted doctors to prescribe and pharmacists to prepare cannabis-based formulations. The objective of the pharmaceutical development and manufacturing process optimization work was to propose a suppository formulation containing doses of 25 mg and 50 mg of tetra-hydrocannabinol (∆-9-THC) as an alternative to existing inhalable or orally administered formulations. The formulation could be used for rectal or vaginal administration, thereby providing dosage control in the treatment of endometriosis and other conditions involving pain. In this study, two substrates from suppositories with standardized Cannabis extractum normatum (CEX) were used: cocoa butter and Witepsol® H15. Materials and Methods: The long-term stability of CEX was investigated over a period of up to 24 months. The concentrations of ∆-9-THC, cannabidiol (CBD), and cannabinol (CBN) were determined using an HPLC method. Furthermore, the water content of the extract, the ethanol residue, and the microbiological purity were determined. The pharmaceutical properties of CEX-incorporated suppositories, namely content uniformity, hardness, softening time, total deformation time, disintegration time, and the release profile of ∆-9-THC, CBD, and CBN, were evaluated in order to develop optimal preparation procedures for pharmacists. Results and Discussion: Following a 24-month stability study on CEX, no significant alterations in component content were observed beyond the specified requirements. The disintegration time, total deformation time, and hardness of the suppositories based on Witepsol® H15 with CEX were found to be longer and higher, respectively, than those of suppositories formulated with cocoa butter. In vitro studies demonstrated that suppositories prepared with Witepsol® H15 exhibited superior release of ∆-9-THC compared to those prepared with cocoa butter. Conclusions: We suggest that pharmacists making prescription drugs in a pharmacy setting in the form of medical marijuana suppositories will receive a better release profile of the drug by choosing Witepsol® H15 as a substrate. Full article
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14 pages, 1957 KB  
Article
Surface Migration of Fatty Acid to Improve Sliding Properties of Hypromellose-Based Coatings
by Maurice Brogly, Sophie Bistac and Armand Fahs
Surfaces 2024, 7(3), 666-679; https://doi.org/10.3390/surfaces7030043 - 2 Sep 2024
Cited by 6 | Viewed by 2414
Abstract
Hypromellose (HM) is a cellulose-derived polymer of pharmaceutical grade that forms easily from thin films and coatings. As few studies concern HM-formulated systems, this study focuses on the formulation of HM films by incorporating a fatty acid additive, making it possible to control [...] Read more.
Hypromellose (HM) is a cellulose-derived polymer of pharmaceutical grade that forms easily from thin films and coatings. As few studies concern HM-formulated systems, this study focuses on the formulation of HM films by incorporating a fatty acid additive, making it possible to control surface properties such as wetting and slip behavior for pharmaceutical or medical applications. The results show that the addition of a very small amount (from 0.1 to 1% w/w) of fatty acid additive reduces HM film affinity for water and water vapor transmission rate, while film appearance and gloss are rather preserved. Surface properties were probed using wettability measurements, Tapping Mode AFM, ATR-FTIR spectrometry, and friction measurements. Tapping Mode AFM images show that the surface roughness reduces by up to 65%. Wettability results show that the surface energy decreases from 43 to 31 mJ.m−2, whereas surface FTIR spectrometry measurements demonstrate that fatty acid molecules migrate on the surface of the formulated films, the driving force being the microphase separation between the polar HM macromolecules and the hydrophobic additive, leading to the formation of a weak boundary layer with poor cohesion. As a consequence, the surface coefficient of friction significantly reduces from 0.38 to 0.08, and fatty acid molecules thus act as a lubricant, improving the sliding properties of HM-based coatings. Full article
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18 pages, 3550 KB  
Article
The Preparation of Curcumin-Loaded Pickering Emulsion Using Gelatin–Chitosan Colloidal Particles as Emulsifier for Possible Application as a Bio-Inspired Cosmetic Formulation
by Beena G. Singh, Nalin Bagora, Minati Nayak, Juby K. Ajish, Nitish Gupta and Amit Kunwar
Pharmaceutics 2024, 16(3), 356; https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics16030356 - 3 Mar 2024
Cited by 17 | Viewed by 4685
Abstract
In the field of preparing cosmetic formulations, recent advances recommend the usage of excipients derived from biocompatible materials. In this context, the present study aimed to prepare and characterize the curcumin-loaded Pickering emulsion for possible applications in cosmetic formulation. The coconut oil which [...] Read more.
In the field of preparing cosmetic formulations, recent advances recommend the usage of excipients derived from biocompatible materials. In this context, the present study aimed to prepare and characterize the curcumin-loaded Pickering emulsion for possible applications in cosmetic formulation. The coconut oil which is often the component of skin care formulations is used as the oily phase. Curcumin, which is well known for absorbing solar radiation, is expected to work synergistically with coconut oil towards improving the sun protection factor (SPF) of the formulation. Additionally, curcumin can also protect the intracellular components through its well-known antioxidant mechanisms. The Pickering emulsion of coconut oil into water was prepared using the composite colloidal particles derived from β-carboxymethyl chitosan (CMC) and Gelatin-A (GA) as the emulsifying agent. The reaction conditions in terms of the weight ratios of CMC and GA, the pH of the reaction medium, the oil volume fraction, and the homogenization speed were optimized to obtain the most stable Pickering emulsion. The obtained systems were physico-chemically characterized by dynamic light scattering, zeta potential, optical microscopy, and rheometric measurements. The final CMC-GA-stabilized emulsion demonstrated an oil droplet size of 100 µm and a SPFspectrophotometric (290–320 nm) value of 8.5 at a curcumin loading of 4 mg/mL. Additionally, the final formulation facilitated the uptake of curcumin into fibroblast (WI26) cells under in vitro conditions. Together, the investigation demonstrates a bio-inspired approach to prepare a curcumin-loaded green Pickering emulsion using biocompatible pharmaceutical grade excipients, which may find utility in cosmetic applications. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Drug Delivery and Controlled Release)
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12 pages, 334 KB  
Article
Harnessing the Bioactive Potential of Limonium spathulatum (Desf.) Kuntze: Insights into Enzyme Inhibition and Phytochemical Profile
by Seria Youssef, Luisa Custódio, Maria João Rodrigues, Catarina G. Pereira, Ricardo C. Calhelha, József Jekő, Zoltán Cziáky and Karim Ben Hamed
Plants 2023, 12(19), 3391; https://doi.org/10.3390/plants12193391 - 26 Sep 2023
Cited by 9 | Viewed by 2865
Abstract
This study assessed the halophyte species Limonium spathulatum (Desf.) as a possible source of natural ingredients with the capacity to inhibit enzymes related to relevant human health disorders and food browning. Extracts using food-grade solvents such as water and ethanol were prepared by [...] Read more.
This study assessed the halophyte species Limonium spathulatum (Desf.) as a possible source of natural ingredients with the capacity to inhibit enzymes related to relevant human health disorders and food browning. Extracts using food-grade solvents such as water and ethanol were prepared by maceration from dried L. spathulatum leaves. They were evaluated for in vitro inhibition activity of enzymes such as acetylcholinesterase (AChE) and butyrylcholinesterase (BChE), α-glucosidase, tyrosinase and lipase, related to Alzheimer’s disease, type-2-diabetes mellitus, skin hyperpigmentation, and obesity, respectively. These extracts were also appraised for in vitro acute toxicity on tumoral and non-tumoral cell lines and their chemical composition by high-performance liquid chromatography coupled with electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (HPLC-ESI-MS/MS). The extracts were more effective towards BChE than AChE. The best results were obtained with the hydroethanolic and water extracts, with IC50 values of 0.03 mg/mL and 0.06 mg/mL, respectively. The hydroethanolic extract had the highest capacity to inhibit α-glucosidase (IC50: 0.04 mg/mL), higher than the positive control used (acarbose, IC50 = 3.14 mg/mL). The ethanol extract displayed the best inhibitory activity against tyrosinase (IC50 = 0.34 mg/mL). The tested samples did not inhibit lipase and exhibited low to moderate cytotoxic activity against the tested cell lines. The hydroethanolic extract had a higher diversity of compounds, followed by the ethanol and water samples. Similar molecules were identified in all the extracts and were mainly hydroxybenzoic acids, hydroxycinnamic acids, and flavonoids. Taken together, these results suggest that L. spathulatum should be further explored as a source of bioactive ingredients for the food, cosmetic, and pharmaceutical industries. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Bioprospecting of Natural Products from Medicinal Plants)
13 pages, 315 KB  
Article
Genotoxicity Assessment of Nutraceuticals Extracted from Thinned Nectarine (Prunus persica L.) and Grape Seed (Vitis vinifera L.) Waste Biomass
by Giorgia Musto, Elisabetta Schiano, Fortuna Iannuzzo, Gian Carlo Tenore, Ettore Novellino and Mariano Stornaiuolo
Foods 2023, 12(6), 1171; https://doi.org/10.3390/foods12061171 - 10 Mar 2023
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 2953
Abstract
Agri-food by-products represent a considerable portion of the waste produced in the world and especially when incorrectly disposed of, contribute to air, soil, and water pollution. Recently, recycling of food waste has proven to be an attractive area of research for pharmaceutical companies, [...] Read more.
Agri-food by-products represent a considerable portion of the waste produced in the world and especially when incorrectly disposed of, contribute to air, soil, and water pollution. Recently, recycling of food waste has proven to be an attractive area of research for pharmaceutical companies, that use agri-food by-products (leaves, bark, roots, seeds, second-best vegetables) as alternative raw material for the extraction of bioactive compounds. Developers and producers are however, advised to assess the safety of nutraceuticals obtained from biowaste that, in virtue of its chemical complexity, could undermine the overall safety of the final products. Here, in compliance with EFSA regulations, we use the Ames test (OECD 471) and the micronucleus test (OECD 487) to assess the mutagenicity of two nutraceuticals obtained from food waste. The first consists of grape seeds (Vitis vinifera L.) that have undergone a process of food-grade depolymerization of proanthocyanidins to release more bioavailable flavan-3-ols. The second nutraceutical product consists of thinned nectarines (Prunus persica L. var nucipersica) containing abscisic acid and polyphenols. The results presented here show that these products are, before as well as after metabolization, non-mutagenic, up to the doses of 5 mg and 100 μg per plate for the Ames and micronucleus test, respectively, and can be thus considered genotoxically safe. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Agro-Food Waste as Source of Nutraceuticals)
35 pages, 7511 KB  
Review
Pickering Emulsions Based in Inorganic Solid Particles: From Product Development to Food Applications
by Andreia Ribeiro, José Carlos B. Lopes, Madalena M. Dias and Maria Filomena Barreiro
Molecules 2023, 28(6), 2504; https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules28062504 - 9 Mar 2023
Cited by 48 | Viewed by 9080
Abstract
Pickering emulsions (PEs) have attracted attention in different fields, such as food, pharmaceuticals and cosmetics, mainly due to their good physical stability. PEs are a promising strategy to develop functional products since the particles’ oil and water phases can act as carriers of [...] Read more.
Pickering emulsions (PEs) have attracted attention in different fields, such as food, pharmaceuticals and cosmetics, mainly due to their good physical stability. PEs are a promising strategy to develop functional products since the particles’ oil and water phases can act as carriers of active compounds, providing multiple combinations potentiating synergistic effects. Moreover, they can answer the sustainable and green chemistry issues arising from using conventional emulsifier-based systems. In this context, this review focuses on the applicability of safe inorganic solid particles as emulsion stabilisers, discussing the main stabilisation mechanisms of oil–water interfaces. In particular, it provides evidence for hydroxyapatite (HAp) particles as Pickering stabilisers, discussing the latest advances. The main technologies used to produce PEs are also presented. From an industrial perspective, an effort was made to list new productive technologies at the laboratory scale and discuss their feasibility for scale-up. Finally, the advantages and potential applications of PEs in the food industry are also described. Overall, this review gathers recent developments in the formulation, production and properties of food-grade PEs based on safe inorganic solid particles. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Feature Papers in Materials Chemistry)
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