2 research outputs found
Formation of the inclusion complex of water soluble fluorescent calix[4]arene and naringenin: solubility, cytotoxic effect and molecular modeling studies
Naringenin is considered as an important flavonoid in phytochemistry because of its important effect on cancer chemoprevention. Unfortunately its poor solubility has restricted its therapeutic applications. In this study, an efficient water-soluble fluorescent calix[4]arene (compound 5) was synthesized as host macromolecule to increase solubility and cytotoxicity in cancer cells of water-insoluble naringenin as well as to clarify localization of naringenin into the cells. Complex formed by host–guest interaction between compound 5 and naringenin was analyzed with UV–visible, fluorescence, FTIR spectroscopic techniques and molecular modeling studies. Stern–Volmer analysis showed binding constant value of Ksv 3.5 × 107 M−1 suggesting strong interaction between host and guest. Binding capacity shows 77% of naringenin was loaded on compound 5. Anticarcinogenic effects of naringenin complex were evaluated on human colorectal carcinoma cells (DLD-1) and it was found that 5-naringenin complex inhibits proliferation of DLD-1 cells 3.4-fold more compared to free naringenin. Fluorescence imaging studies show 5-naringenin complex was accumulated into the cytoplasm instead of the nucleus. Increased solubility and cytotoxicity of naringenin with fluorescent calix[4]arene makes it one of the potential candidates as a therapeutic enhancer. For deep understanding of host–guest interaction mechanisms, complementary multiscale molecular modeling studies were also carried out. Communicated by Ramaswamy H. Sarma</p
Inclusion of Quercetin in Gold Nanoparticles Decorated with Supramolecular Hosts Amplifies Its Tumor Targeting Properties
Despite the anticancer
potential of natural products (NPs), their
limited bioavailability necessitates laborious derivatization or covalent
conjugation to delivery vehicles. To unleash their potential, we developed
a nanohybrid delivery platform with a noncovalently tunable surface.
Initially, the active compound was encapsulated in a macrocycle, p-sulfonatocalix[4]arene, enabling a 62 000-fold
aqueous solubility amplification as also a 2.9-fold enhancement in
its cytotoxicity with respect to the parent compound in SW-620 colon
cancer cells. A pH stimuli responsive behavior was recorded for this
formulate, where a programmable release of quercetin from the macrocycle
was monitored in an acidic environment. Then, a nanoparticle gold
core was decorated with calixarene hosts to accommodate noncovalently
NPs. The loaded nanocarrier with the NP quercetin dramatically enhanced
the cytotoxicity (>50-fold) of the parent NP in colon cancer and
altered
its cell membrane transport mode. In vivo experiments
in a mouse 4T1 tumor model showed a reduction of tumor volume in mice
treated with quercetin-loaded nanoparticles without apparent toxic
effects. Further analysis of the tumor-derived RNA highlighted that
treatment with quercetin-loaded nanoparticles altered the expression
of 27 genes related to apoptosis
