4.7 Article

Gelled Liquid Crystal Nanocarriers for Improved Antioxidant Activity of Resveratrol

Journal

GELS
Volume 9, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/gels9110872

Keywords

resveratrol; liquid crystals nanocarriers; skin application; antioxidant activity; microrheology; dynamic rheology

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This study improved the antioxidant activity of resveratrol by encapsulating it in nanocarriers and gelling the systems to improve contact time with the skin. Results showed that the resveratrol-loaded nanosystems had good antioxidant effects and potential for treating skin diseases.
As many natural origin antioxidants, resveratrol is characterized by non-suitable physicochemical properties for its topical application. To allow its benefits to manifest on human skin, resveratrol has been entrapped within liquid crystal nanocarriers (LCNs) made up of glyceryl monooleate, a penetration enhancer, and DSPE-PEG 750. The nanosystems have been more deeply characterized by using dynamic light scattering and Turbiscan Lab (R) Expert optical analyzer, and they have been tested in vitro on NCTC 2544. The improved antioxidant activity of entrapped resveratrol was evaluated on keratinocyte cells as a function of its concentration. Finally, to really propose the resveratrol-loaded LCNs for topical use, the systems were gelled by using two different gelling agents, poloxamer P407 and carboxymethyl cellulose, to improve the contact time between skin and formulation. The rheological features of obtained gels were evaluated using two important methods (microrheology at rest and dynamic rheology), before testing their safety profile on human healthy volunteers. The obtained results showed the ability of LCNs to improve antioxidant activity of RSV and the gelled LCNs showed good rheological profiles. In conclusion, the results confirmed the potentiality of gelled resveratrol-loaded nanosystems for skin disease, mainly related to their antioxidant effects.

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