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Keywords = redox-responsive polymers

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23 pages, 2583 KB  
Systematic Review
From Pathology to Formulation: Designing Biodegradable Polymers for Personalized Drug Delivery
by Mariann Dinya, Elek Dinya and Gábor M. Mórotz
Pharmaceutics 2026, 18(3), 330; https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics18030330 - 6 Mar 2026
Viewed by 670
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Selection of polymer carriers for targeted drug delivery is typically guided by material availability or trigger responsiveness rather than disease-specific evidence. However, successful preclinical formulations may already encode implicit design rules linking polymer composition to particular pathological environments. This study aimed to [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Selection of polymer carriers for targeted drug delivery is typically guided by material availability or trigger responsiveness rather than disease-specific evidence. However, successful preclinical formulations may already encode implicit design rules linking polymer composition to particular pathological environments. This study aimed to identify reproducible material-disease associations across biodegradable polymer systems and to derive formulation-oriented guidance for disease-calibrated carrier selection. Methods: A structured synthesis of 65 preclinical in vivo studies (2020–2025) covering inflammatory bowel disease, arthritis, cardiovascular inflammation, and solid tumors was performed. Extracted variables included polymer family, backbone chemistry, stimulus responsiveness, disease model, and reported therapeutic benefit relative to controls. Associations between polymer composition, trigger mechanisms, and disease categories were analyzed using cross-tabulation, chi-square statistics, Cramér’s V, and direction-of-effect synthesis. Results: Distinct material-disease clustering patterns emerged. Ionizable polysaccharide and methacrylate systems (e.g., alginate, chitosan, Eudragit) were strongly associated with intestinal inflammatory models, reflecting reliance on pH- and ion-mediated mechanisms. Enzyme-degradable hyaluronic acid matrices were concentrated in joint and cartilage disorders characterized by protease overexpression. Oxidation-sensitive polyether systems (e.g., PEG-PPS) and redox-active hybrid platforms predominated in atherosclerosis and tumor models, where oxidative stress is a defining pathological feature. Composite and multi-responsive systems were disproportionately represented in tumors, consistent with microenvironmental heterogeneity. Across studies, therapeutic improvement was consistently reported when polymer functional motifs aligned with dominant biochemical drivers of the disease. Conclusions: Successful biodegradable polymer carriers exhibit disease-specific compatibility patterns rather than universal applicability. These recurring associations suggest that polymer selection can be guided by pathological context even in the absence of direct outcome comparisons. The resulting formulation-oriented framework supports rational carrier choice for personalized drug delivery based on disease-specific microenvironment signatures. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Biopharmaceutics)
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28 pages, 1587 KB  
Article
Micro/Nanoplastic-Enhanced Oxidative Potential, Antioxidant Depletion, Inflammation in PM2.5 and Cytologic and Metabolomic Shifts
by Hasan Saygin and Asli Baysal
Microplastics 2026, 5(1), 43; https://doi.org/10.3390/microplastics5010043 - 3 Mar 2026
Viewed by 299
Abstract
Micro- and nanoplastics (MNPs) are increasingly contaminating atmospheric particulates, yet their influence on PM2.5 chemistry and toxicity remains poorly understood. This study investigates how secondary MNPs derived from common products (water bottles, coffee cups, and food plates) alter the properties of PM [...] Read more.
Micro- and nanoplastics (MNPs) are increasingly contaminating atmospheric particulates, yet their influence on PM2.5 chemistry and toxicity remains poorly understood. This study investigates how secondary MNPs derived from common products (water bottles, coffee cups, and food plates) alter the properties of PM2.5. We evaluated PM2.5 leaching characteristics, oxidative potential, inflammatory activity, and bacterial-based cytological and metabolomic responses after 24 h of exposure to three MNP doses. MNPs markedly altered PM2.5 chromophoric composition, with bottle-derived (PET) MNPs inducing the strongest increases in aromaticity, humification, and slope factor, followed by coffee cups (PLA/paper) and food plates (PP). These leaching shifts aligned with polymer-specific redox behaviors: bottle-derived MNPs enhanced antioxidant enrichment at high PM2.5, whereas cup-derived MNPs produced the most pronounced protein-denaturation-based inflammatory activity. Escherichia coli assays showed non-linear growth responses, elevated reactive oxygen species, altered carbohydrate secretion, and membrane and protein perturbations that paralleled PM2.5 chemical reactivity. FTIR metabolomic fingerprints revealed dose- and polymer-dependent disruptions in polysaccharide, lipid, and protein domains. Overall, the results demonstrate a mechanistic cascade in which MNP exposure reshapes PM2.5 chemistry, amplifies oxidative and inflammatory potential, and culminates in measurable cytological and metabolic stress, with polymer identity (PET > PLA/paper > PP) as the dominant driver. Full article
(This article belongs to the Collection Feature Papers in Microplastics)
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26 pages, 694 KB  
Review
Hydrogel-Based Therapeutic Strategies for Post-Cholecystectomy NAFLD: Targeting Bile Acid Signaling, Gut Microbiota, Inflammation, and Hepatic Fibrosis
by Georgiana-Andreea Marinescu, Alexandra-Daniela Rotaru-Zavaleanu, Emil-Tiberius Trasca, Elena-Irina Caluianu, Oana Taisescu, Andrei Gresita, Madalina Iuliana Musat, Dumitru Radulescu, Razvan Mercut and Citto-Iulian Taisescu
Gels 2026, 12(2), 179; https://doi.org/10.3390/gels12020179 - 20 Feb 2026
Viewed by 732
Abstract
Post-cholecystectomy non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), now encompassed within metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD), is increasingly linked to persistent disruption of bile acid kinetics and gut–liver axis signaling after gallbladder removal. Continuous bile delivery to the intestine reshapes the bile acid pool, [...] Read more.
Post-cholecystectomy non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), now encompassed within metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD), is increasingly linked to persistent disruption of bile acid kinetics and gut–liver axis signaling after gallbladder removal. Continuous bile delivery to the intestine reshapes the bile acid pool, perturbs FXR–FGF19/TGR5 pathways, remodels gut microbiota, and compromises epithelial barrier integrity, collectively promoting portal endotoxemia, chronic hepatic inflammation, and fibrogenic remodeling. Hydrogel-based biomaterials offer a mechanistically aligned therapeutic platform for this setting because they enable localized, sustained, and stimuli-responsive interventions at intestinal or hepatic sites. Functional hydrogels can sequester excess bile acids, protect and deliver probiotics/prebiotics/postbiotics, reinforce mucosal barrier function, and provide controlled release of anti-inflammatory or antifibrotic agents with reduced systemic exposure. In this review, we map emerging hydrogel strategies relevant to post-cholecystectomy NAFLD across four pathogenic nodes, bile acid dysregulation, dysbiosis, inflammation, and fibrosis, and highlight design principles (polymer chemistry, charge/hydrophobicity balance, mucoadhesion, and pH/redox/enzyme responsiveness) that enable targeted modulation of the gut–liver axis. Finally, we identify key translational gaps, including the lack of post-cholecystectomy-specific experimental models and standardized outcome measures integrating bile acid profiling, microbiome readouts, and hepatic histology. Hydrogel technologies represent a promising route toward localized and multimodal therapy in metabolic liver disease, warranting focused preclinical validation and clinical development. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Hydrogels in Biomedicine: Drug Delivery and Tissue Engineering)
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48 pages, 4818 KB  
Review
Design and Application of Stimuli-Responsive Hydrogels for 4D Printing: A Review of Adaptive Materials in Engineering
by Muhammad F. Siddique, Farag K. Omar and Ali H. Al-Marzouqi
Gels 2026, 12(2), 138; https://doi.org/10.3390/gels12020138 - 2 Feb 2026
Viewed by 918
Abstract
Stimuli-responsive hydrogels are an emerging class of smart materials with immense potential across biomedical engineering, soft robotics, environmental systems, and advanced manufacturing. In this review, we present an in-depth exploration of their material design, classification, fabrication strategies, and real-world applications. We examine how [...] Read more.
Stimuli-responsive hydrogels are an emerging class of smart materials with immense potential across biomedical engineering, soft robotics, environmental systems, and advanced manufacturing. In this review, we present an in-depth exploration of their material design, classification, fabrication strategies, and real-world applications. We examine how a wide range of external stimuli—such as temperature, pH, moisture, ions, electricity, magnetism, redox conditions, and light—interact with polymer composition and crosslinking chemistry to shape the responsive behavior of hydrogels. Special attention is given to the growing field of 4D printing, where time-dependent shape and property changes enable dynamic, programmable systems. Unlike existing reviews that often treat materials, stimuli, or applications in isolation, this work introduces a multidimensional comparative framework that connects stimulus-response behavior with fabrication techniques and end-use domains. We also highlight key challenges that limit practical deployment—including mechanical fragility, slow actuation, and scale-up difficulties—and outline engineering solutions such as hybrid material design, anisotropic structuring, and multi-stimuli integration. Our aim is to offer a forward-looking perspective that bridges material innovation with functional design, serving as a resource for researchers and engineers working to develop next-generation adaptive systems. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue 3D Printing of Gel-Based Materials (2nd Edition))
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18 pages, 2368 KB  
Article
Pluronic® F127 Polymeric Micelles as Nanocarriers for Pentamidine: Improving Safety and Biological Efficacy Against Leishmania major
by Kristell Panta Quezada, Gustavo González-Gaitano and Paul Nguewa
Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2026, 27(3), 1300; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms27031300 - 28 Jan 2026
Viewed by 436
Abstract
Cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL) is a neglected tropical disease for which current chemotherapeutic options are limited by systemic toxicity (such as hepato-nephrotoxicity, arrhythmia, nausea, vomiting) and difficult administration regimens. Pentamidine (PTM), although effective, exhibits severe dose-limiting adverse effects. Polymeric micelles based on Pluronic® [...] Read more.
Cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL) is a neglected tropical disease for which current chemotherapeutic options are limited by systemic toxicity (such as hepato-nephrotoxicity, arrhythmia, nausea, vomiting) and difficult administration regimens. Pentamidine (PTM), although effective, exhibits severe dose-limiting adverse effects. Polymeric micelles based on Pluronic® F127 (F127) offer an attractive strategy to improve PTM delivery by enhancing solubility, reducing cytotoxicity, and enabling controlled release. Here, we developed PTM-loaded F127 polymeric micelles and performed a multidisciplinary evaluation combining physicochemical characterization, in vitro biological assays, and gene expression profiling. Dynamic light scattering, UV–visible absorption, fluorescence spectroscopy, and NMR confirmed micelle formation, PTM–polymer interactions, and temperature-dependent assembly. PTM-loaded micelles exhibited biorelevant nanoscale dimensions and preserved stability under physiological conditions. Biological assays demonstrated that F127 micelles markedly reduced PTM cytotoxicity in RAW264.7 macrophages while maintaining potent antileishmanial activity against Leishmania major promastigotes. RT-qPCR analysis revealed modulation of key pathways involved in redox homeostasis, oxidative stress, calcium regulation, apoptosis-like responses, and drug resistance, suggesting that micellar encapsulation influences both PTM bioavailability and parasite stress responses. Overall, PTM-loaded F127 micelles significantly improved the therapeutic index of PTM in vitro. These findings support the potential of F127 polymeric micelles as a promising nanocarrier platform for safer and more effective CL therapy. Full article
(This article belongs to the Collection Feature Papers in Molecular Nanoscience)
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40 pages, 1919 KB  
Review
Architecting Functional Polymers: Advances in Modular Synthesis, Responsive Design, and Multifaceted Applications
by Akhil Sharma, Monu Sharma, Sonu Sharma, Vikas Sharma, Shivika Sharma and Iyyakkannu Sivanesan
Polymers 2026, 18(3), 334; https://doi.org/10.3390/polym18030334 - 26 Jan 2026
Viewed by 724
Abstract
The recent development in polymer science has gone beyond the traditional linear and randomly functionalizable macromolecules to the architected polymer systems, which integrate modular synthesis and dynamic responsiveness. Although the literature related to polymer synthesis and stimuli-responsive materials and applications is widely discussed, [...] Read more.
The recent development in polymer science has gone beyond the traditional linear and randomly functionalizable macromolecules to the architected polymer systems, which integrate modular synthesis and dynamic responsiveness. Although the literature related to polymer synthesis and stimuli-responsive materials and applications is widely discussed, it is common to review the aspects independently, restricting a complete picture of how architectural modularity controls adaptive performance. This gap is filled in this review with an integrated framework of relating modular polymer synthesis, stimuli-responsive design, and application-oriented functionality in a single coherent design philosophy. The scientific novelty of this review is that the focus on modular polymers is not only on synthetic constructs, but is a programmable functional scaffold where the structural precision is the direct determinant of responsiveness, multifunctionality, and performance. Controlled polymerization and post-polymerization modification regimes are mentioned to be tools that allow precise positioning of functional modules, and this allows polymers to respond in predictable ways to environmental stimuli like pH, temperature, light, redox conditions, etc. In addition, the review identifies the role of a synergistic combination of various responsive modules in the emergence of behaviours that would not be reached in conventional polymer systems. This review offers a coherent viewpoint on the future of functional polymers of the next generation by bringing together synthetic approaches to nano-responsive behaviour and real-world technologies, such as drug delivery, self-healing surfaces, adaptive surfaces, and biosensing surfaces. The framework in the present paper provides a logical route towards the development of environmentally friendly, multifunctional, and adjustable polymer structures. Full article
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16 pages, 7964 KB  
Article
Metallic Flexible NiTi Wire Microcrack Transducer for Label-Free Impedimetric Sensing of Escherichia coli
by Gizem Özlü Türk and Mehmet Çağrı Soylu
Biosensors 2026, 16(1), 54; https://doi.org/10.3390/bios16010054 - 10 Jan 2026
Viewed by 1384
Abstract
Flexible biosensors offer rapid and low-cost diagnostics but are often limited by the mechanical and electrochemical instability of polymer-based designs in biological media. Here, we introduce a metallic flexible microcrack transducer that exploits the intrinsic deformability of superelastic nickel–titanium (NiTi) for label-free impedimetric [...] Read more.
Flexible biosensors offer rapid and low-cost diagnostics but are often limited by the mechanical and electrochemical instability of polymer-based designs in biological media. Here, we introduce a metallic flexible microcrack transducer that exploits the intrinsic deformability of superelastic nickel–titanium (NiTi) for label-free impedimetric detection. Mechanical bending of NiTi wires spontaneously generates martensitic-phase microcracks whose metal–gap–metal geometry forms the active transduction sites, where functional interfacial layers and captured analytes modulate the local dielectric environment and govern the impedance response. Our approach imparts a novel dielectric character to the alloy, enabling its unexplored application in the megahertz (MHz) frequency domain (0.01–10 MHz) where native NiTi is merely conductive. Functionalization with Escherichia coli (E. coli)-specific antibodies renders these microdomains biologically active. This effectively transforms the mechanically induced microcracks into tunable impedance elements driven by analyte binding. The γ-bent NiTi sensors achieved stable and quantitative detection of E. coli ATCC 25922 in sterile human urine, with a detection limit of 64 colony forming units (CFU) mL−1 within 45 min, without redox mediators, external labels, or amplification steps. This work pioneers the use of martensitic microcrack networks, mimicking self-healing behavior in a superelastic alloy as functional transduction elements, defining a new class of metallic flexible biosensors that integrate mechanical robustness, analytical reliability, and scalability for point-of-care biosensing. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Functional Materials for Biosensing Applications (2nd Edition))
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22 pages, 3163 KB  
Article
Dual-Band Electrochromic Poly(Amide-Imide)s with Redox-Stable N,N,N’,N’-Tetraphenyl-1,4-Phenylenediamine Segments
by Bo-Wei Huang and Sheng-Huei Hsiao
Polymers 2026, 18(1), 139; https://doi.org/10.3390/polym18010139 - 3 Jan 2026
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 500
Abstract
Two amide-preformed aromatic diamine monomers, N,N-bis(4-(3-aminobenzamido)phenyl)-N’,N’-bis(4-methoxyphenyl)-1,4-phenylenediamine (m-6) and N,N-bis(4-(4-aminobenzamido)phenyl)-N’,N’-bis(4-methoxyphenyl)-1,4-phenylenediamine (p-6), were synthesized and utilized to prepare two series of electroactive poly(amide-imide)s [...] Read more.
Two amide-preformed aromatic diamine monomers, N,N-bis(4-(3-aminobenzamido)phenyl)-N’,N’-bis(4-methoxyphenyl)-1,4-phenylenediamine (m-6) and N,N-bis(4-(4-aminobenzamido)phenyl)-N’,N’-bis(4-methoxyphenyl)-1,4-phenylenediamine (p-6), were synthesized and utilized to prepare two series of electroactive poly(amide-imide)s (PAIs) through a two-step polycondensation reaction with commercially available aromatic tetracarboxylic dianhydrides. The obtained polymers exhibited solubility in various polar organic solvents, and most of them could form transparent, flexible films via solution casting. Thermal analysis indicated glass transition temperatures (Tg) ranging from 250 °C to 277 °C, as measured by DSC, with no significant weight loss observed before 400 °C in TGA tests. Cyclic voltammograms (CV) of the polymer films on ITO-coated glass substrates revealed two reversible oxidation redox pairs between 0.67 and 1.04 V vs. Ag/AgCl in an electrolyte-containing acetonitrile solution. The PAI films showed stable redox activity with high optical contrast both in the visible and near-infrared regions, transitioning from colorless in the neutral state to green and blue in the oxidized states. Furthermore, the polymer films retained good electrochemical and electrochromic stability even after more than 100 cyclic switching operations. The PAIs displayed outstanding electrochromic performance, including high optical contrast (up to 95%), rapid response times (below 4.6 s for coloring and 5.7 s for bleaching), high coloration efficiency (up to 240 cm2/C), and low decay in optical contrast (less than 5% after 100 switching cycles for most PAIs). Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Smart and Functional Polymers)
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21 pages, 8040 KB  
Article
Functionalization of Microfiltration Media Towards Catalytic Hydrogenation of Selected Halo-Organics from Water
by Subrajit Bosu, Samuel S. Thompson, Doo Young Kim, Noah D. Meeks and Dibakar Bhattacharyya
Nanomaterials 2026, 16(1), 14; https://doi.org/10.3390/nano16010014 - 22 Dec 2025
Viewed by 1678
Abstract
Contaminated water detoxification remains difficult due to the presence of persistent halo-organic contaminants, such as perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) and chlorophenols, which are chemically stable and resist conventional purification methods. Functionalized membrane-based separation and decontamination have garnered immense attention in recent years. Commercially available [...] Read more.
Contaminated water detoxification remains difficult due to the presence of persistent halo-organic contaminants, such as perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) and chlorophenols, which are chemically stable and resist conventional purification methods. Functionalized membrane-based separation and decontamination have garnered immense attention in recent years. Commercially available microfiltration membrane (PVDF) and polymeric non-woven fiber filters (glass and composite) are functionalized with poly(methacrylic acid) (PMAA) that shows outstanding pH-responsive performance and tunable water permeability under ambient conditions perfect for environmental applications. Polymer loading based on weight gain measurements on PMAA–microglass composite fibers (137%) and microglass fibers (116%) confirmed their extent of functionalization, which was significantly greater than that of PVDF (25%) due to its widely effective pore diameter. Presence of chemically active hydrogel within PVDF matrix was validated by FTIR (hydroxyl/carbonyl) stretch peak, substantial decrease in contact angle (68.8° ± 0.5° to 30.8° ± 1.9°), and decrease in pure water flux from 509 to 148 LMH/bar. Nanoparticles are generated both in solution and within PVDF using simple redox reactions. This strategy is extended to PVDF-PMAA membranes, which are loaded with Fe/Pd nanoparticles for catalytic conversion of 4-chlorophenol and PFOA, forming Fe/Pd-PVDF-PMAA systems. A total of 0.25 mg/L Fe/Pd nanoparticles synthesized in solution displayed alloy-type structures and demonstrated a strong catalytic performance, achieving complete hydrogenation of 4-chlorophenol to phenol and 67% hydrogenation of PFOA to its reduced form at 22–23 °C with ultrapure hydrogen gas supply at pH 5.7. These results underscore the potential of hybrid polymer–nanoparticle systems as a novel remediation strategy, integrating tunable separation with catalytic degradation to overcome the limitations of conventional water treatment methods. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Nanotechnology for Pollutant Degradation)
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40 pages, 2992 KB  
Review
Advances in Mesoporous Silica and Hybrid Nanoparticles for Drug Delivery: Synthesis, Functionalization, and Biomedical Applications
by Ahmad Almatroudi
Pharmaceutics 2025, 17(12), 1602; https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics17121602 - 12 Dec 2025
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 1604
Abstract
Mesoporous silica nanoparticles (MSNs) are among the most adaptable nanocarriers in modern pharmaceutics, characterized by a high surface area, tunable pore size, controllable morphology, and excellent biocompatibility. These qualities enable effective encapsulation, protection, and the delivery of drugs in a specific area and, [...] Read more.
Mesoporous silica nanoparticles (MSNs) are among the most adaptable nanocarriers in modern pharmaceutics, characterized by a high surface area, tunable pore size, controllable morphology, and excellent biocompatibility. These qualities enable effective encapsulation, protection, and the delivery of drugs in a specific area and, therefore, MSNs are powerful platforms for the targeted and controlled delivery of drugs and theragnostic agents. Over the past ten years and within the 2021–2025 period, the advancement of MSN design has led to the creation of hybrid nanostructures into polymers, lipids, metals, and biomolecules that have yielded multifunctional carriers with enhanced stability, responsiveness, and biological activities. The current review provides a review of the synthesis methods, surface functionalization techniques, and physicochemical characterization techniques that define the next-generation MSN-based delivery systems. The particular focus is put on stimuli-responsive systems, such as redox, pH, enzyme-activated, and light-activated systems, that enable delivering drugs in a controlled and localized manner. We further provide a summary of the biomedical use of MSNs and their hybrids such as in cancer chemotherapy, gene and nucleic acid delivery, antimicrobial and vaccine delivery, and central nervous system targeting, supported by recent in vivo and in vitro studies. Important evaluations of biocompatibility, immunogenicity, degradation, and biodistribution in vivo are also provided with a focus on safety in addition to the regulatory impediments to clinical translation. The review concludes by saying that there are still limitations such as large-scale reproducibility, long-term toxicity, and standardization by the regulators, and that directions are being taken in the future in the fields of smart programmable nanocarriers, green synthesis, and sustainable manufacture. Overall, mesoporous silica and hybrid nanoparticles represent a breakthrough technology in the nanomedicine sector with potentials that are unrivaled in relation to targeted, controlled, and personalized therapeutic interventions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Drug Delivery and Controlled Release)
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49 pages, 8174 KB  
Review
Biocompatible Stimuli-Sensitive Natural Hydrogels: Recent Advances in Biomedical Applications
by Jose M. Calderon Moreno, Mariana Chelu and Monica Popa
Gels 2025, 11(12), 993; https://doi.org/10.3390/gels11120993 - 10 Dec 2025
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 1943
Abstract
Biocompatible stimuli-sensitive hydrogels are a versatile and promising class of materials with significant potential for various biomedical applications. These ‘’smart’’ hydrogels can dynamically respond to external environmental stimuli such as pH, temperature, enzymes, or biomolecular interactions, enabling controlled drug release, tissue regeneration, wound [...] Read more.
Biocompatible stimuli-sensitive hydrogels are a versatile and promising class of materials with significant potential for various biomedical applications. These ‘’smart’’ hydrogels can dynamically respond to external environmental stimuli such as pH, temperature, enzymes, or biomolecular interactions, enabling controlled drug release, tissue regeneration, wound healing, and biosensing applications. Hydrogels derived from natural polymers, including chitosan, alginate, collagen, and hyaluronic acid, offer key advantages such as intrinsic biocompatibility, biodegradability, and the ability to mimic the extracellular matrix. Their ability to respond to environmental stimuli—including pH, temperature, redox potential, and enzymatic activity—enables control over drug release and tissue regeneration processes. This review explores the fundamental principles governing the design, properties, and mechanisms of responsiveness of natural stimuli-sensitive hydrogels. It also highlights recent advancements in their biomedical applications, discusses existing challenges, and outlines future research directions aimed at improving their functional performance and therapeutic potential for sustainable healthcare solutions. Full article
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15 pages, 2204 KB  
Article
Electrochemical DNA Biosensor for Detection of Hepatitis C Virus Using a 3D Poly-L-Lysine/Carbon Nanotube Film
by Gilvânia M. Santana, Anna P. O. Souza, Erika K. G. Trindade, Stephen R. Benjamin and Rosa Fireman Dutra
Chemosensors 2025, 13(11), 379; https://doi.org/10.3390/chemosensors13110379 - 28 Oct 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 998
Abstract
Hepatitis C represents a critical global health crisis, causing approximately 1.4 million deaths annually. Although 98% of cases are treatable, only about 20% of infected individuals know their hepatitis C virus (HCV) status, highlighting the urgent need for rapid and more efficient diagnostic [...] Read more.
Hepatitis C represents a critical global health crisis, causing approximately 1.4 million deaths annually. Although 98% of cases are treatable, only about 20% of infected individuals know their hepatitis C virus (HCV) status, highlighting the urgent need for rapid and more efficient diagnostic management. Viral genetic material can be detected in serum or plasma within just one week of exposure, making it the most reliable marker and the gold standard for active HCV infection diagnosis. In this study, a biosensor was developed to detect conserved nucleotide sequences of HCV using a 3D surface electrode composed of poly-L-lysine (PLL) and carbon nanotubes (CNTs). PLL is a positively charged biocompatible polymer rich in amine groups, attractive for the immobilization of proteins, DNA, and other biomolecules. PLL was employed to construct a 3D surface with vertically aligned CNTs, achieving a high electron transfer rate. Cyclic voltammetry technique and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) were used to characterize the sensor platform, and analytical responses were measured by differential pulse voltammetry. This HCV biosensor detected the hybridization event by a significant reduction in DPV peaks in the presence of the ferri/ferrocyanide redox probe, without any intercalator agents. DNA responses were observed in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) and cDNA-spiked serum samples, demonstrating its analytical specificity. These findings represent advances in analytical tools that can effectively address the challenges of timely diagnosis for asymptomatic HCV carriers. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Application of Carbon Nanotubes in Sensing)
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36 pages, 2691 KB  
Review
Advanced Electrochemical Sensors for Rapid and Sensitive Monitoring of Tryptophan and Tryptamine in Clinical Diagnostics
by Janani Sridev, Arif R. Deen, Md Younus Ali, Wei-Ting Ting, M. Jamal Deen and Matiar M. R. Howlader
Biosensors 2025, 15(9), 626; https://doi.org/10.3390/bios15090626 - 19 Sep 2025
Viewed by 2352
Abstract
Tryptophan (Trp) and tryptamine (Tryp), critical biomarkers in mood regulation, immune function, and metabolic homeostasis, are increasingly recognized for their roles in both oral and systemic pathologies, including neurodegenerative disorders, cancers, and inflammatory conditions. Their rapid, sensitive detection in biofluids such as saliva—a [...] Read more.
Tryptophan (Trp) and tryptamine (Tryp), critical biomarkers in mood regulation, immune function, and metabolic homeostasis, are increasingly recognized for their roles in both oral and systemic pathologies, including neurodegenerative disorders, cancers, and inflammatory conditions. Their rapid, sensitive detection in biofluids such as saliva—a non-invasive, real-time diagnostic medium—offers transformative potential for early disease identification and personalized health monitoring. This review synthesizes advancements in electrochemical sensor technologies tailored for Trp and Tryp quantification, emphasizing their clinical relevance in diagnosing conditions like oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC), Alzheimer’s disease (AD), and breast cancer, where dysregulated Trp metabolism reflects immune dysfunction or tumor progression. Electrochemical platforms have overcome the limitations of conventional techniques (e.g., enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISA) and mass spectrometry) by integrating innovative nanomaterials and smart engineering strategies. Carbon-based architectures, such as graphene (Gr) and carbon nanotubes (CNTs) functionalized with metal nanoparticles (Ni and Co) or nitrogen dopants, amplify electron transfer kinetics and catalytic activity, achieving sub-nanomolar detection limits. Synergies between doping and advanced functionalization—via aptamers (Apt), molecularly imprinted polymers (MIPs), or metal-oxide hybrids—impart exceptional selectivity, enabling the precise discrimination of Trp and Tryp in complex matrices like saliva. Mechanistically, redox reactions at the indole ring are optimized through tailored electrode interfaces, which enhance reaction kinetics and stability over repeated cycles. Translational strides include 3D-printed microfluidics and wearable sensors for continuous intraoral health surveillance, demonstrating clinical utility in detecting elevated Trp levels in OSCC and breast cancer. These platforms align with point-of-care (POC) needs through rapid response times, minimal fouling, and compatibility with scalable fabrication. However, challenges persist in standardizing saliva collection, mitigating matrix interference, and validating biomarkers across diverse populations. Emerging solutions, such as AI-driven analytics and antifouling coatings, coupled with interdisciplinary efforts to refine device integration and manufacturing, are critical to bridging these gaps. By harmonizing material innovation with clinical insights, electrochemical sensors promise to revolutionize precision medicine, offering cost-effective, real-time diagnostics for both localized oral pathologies and systemic diseases. As the field advances, addressing stability and scalability barriers will unlock the full potential of these technologies, transforming them into indispensable tools for early intervention and tailored therapeutic monitoring in global healthcare. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Nanomaterial-Based Biosensors for Point-of-Care Testing)
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63 pages, 4971 KB  
Review
Electrochemical Nanosensors Applied to the Assay of Some Food Components—A Review
by Aurelia Magdalena Pisoschi, Florin Iordache, Loredana Stanca, Petronela Mihaela Rosu, Nicoleta Ciocirlie, Ovidiu Ionut Geicu, Liviu Bilteanu and Andreea Iren Serban
Chemosensors 2025, 13(8), 272; https://doi.org/10.3390/chemosensors13080272 - 23 Jul 2025
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 3071
Abstract
Nanomaterials’ special features enable their extensive application in chemical and biochemical nanosensors for food assays; food packaging; environmental, medicinal, and pharmaceutical applications; and photoelectronics. The analytical strategies based on novel nanomaterials have proved their pivotal role and increasing interest in the assay of [...] Read more.
Nanomaterials’ special features enable their extensive application in chemical and biochemical nanosensors for food assays; food packaging; environmental, medicinal, and pharmaceutical applications; and photoelectronics. The analytical strategies based on novel nanomaterials have proved their pivotal role and increasing interest in the assay of key food components. The choice of transducer is pivotal for promoting the performance of electrochemical sensors. Electrochemical nano-transducers provide a large active surface area, enabling improved sensitivity, specificity, fast assay, precision, accuracy, and reproducibility, over the analytical range of interest, when compared to traditional sensors. Synthetic routes encompass physical techniques in general based on top–down approaches, chemical methods mainly relying on bottom–up approaches, or green technologies. Hybrid techniques such as electrochemical pathways or photochemical reduction are also applied. Electrochemical nanocomposite sensors relying on conducting polymers are amenable to performance improvement, achieved by integrating redox mediators, conductive hydrogels, and molecular imprinting polymers. Carbon-based or metal-based nanoparticles are used in combination with ionic liquids, enhancing conductivity and electron transfer. The composites may be prepared using a plethora of combinations of carbon-based, metal-based, or organic-based nanomaterials, promoting a high electrocatalytic response, and can accommodate biorecognition elements for increased specificity. Nanomaterials can function as pivotal components in electrochemical (bio)sensors applied to food assays, aiming at the analysis of bioactives, nutrients, food additives, and contaminants. Given the broad range of transducer types, detection modes, and targeted analytes, it is important to discuss the analytical performance and applicability of such nanosensors. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Electrochemical Sensor for Food Analysis)
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29 pages, 8644 KB  
Review
Recent Advances in Resistive Gas Sensors: Fundamentals, Material and Device Design, and Intelligent Applications
by Peiqingfeng Wang, Shusheng Xu, Xuerong Shi, Jiaqing Zhu, Haichao Xiong and Huimin Wen
Chemosensors 2025, 13(7), 224; https://doi.org/10.3390/chemosensors13070224 - 21 Jun 2025
Cited by 20 | Viewed by 5634
Abstract
Resistive gas sensors have attracted significant attention due to their simple architecture, low cost, and ease of integration, with widespread applications in environmental monitoring, industrial safety, and healthcare diagnostics. This review provides a comprehensive overview of recent advances in resistive gas sensors, focusing [...] Read more.
Resistive gas sensors have attracted significant attention due to their simple architecture, low cost, and ease of integration, with widespread applications in environmental monitoring, industrial safety, and healthcare diagnostics. This review provides a comprehensive overview of recent advances in resistive gas sensors, focusing on their fundamental working mechanisms, sensing material design, device architecture optimization, and intelligent system integration. These sensors primarily operate based on changes in electrical resistance induced by interactions between gas molecules and sensing materials, including physical adsorption, charge transfer, and surface redox reactions. In terms of materials, metal oxide semiconductors, conductive polymers, carbon-based nanomaterials, and their composites have demonstrated enhanced sensitivity and selectivity through strategies such as doping, surface functionalization, and heterojunction engineering, while also enabling reduced operating temperatures. Device-level innovations—such as microheater integration, self-heated nanowires, and multi-sensor arrays—have further improved response speed and energy efficiency. Moreover, the incorporation of artificial intelligence (AI) and Internet of Things (IoT) technologies has significantly advanced signal processing, pattern recognition, and long-term operational stability. Machine learning (ML) algorithms have enabled intelligent design of novel sensing materials, optimized multi-gas identification, and enhanced data reliability in complex environments. These synergistic developments are driving resistive gas sensors toward low-power, highly integrated, and multifunctional platforms, particularly in emerging applications such as wearable electronics, breath diagnostics, and smart city infrastructure. This review concludes with a perspective on future research directions, emphasizing the importance of improving material stability, interference resistance, standardized fabrication, and intelligent system integration for large-scale practical deployment. Full article
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