Published 2019
| Version v1
Publication
Reshaped as polyester-based nanoparticles, gallic acid inhibits platelet aggregation, reactive oxygen species production and multi-resistant Gram-positive bacteria with an efficiency never obtained
Description
Natural polyphenols such as Gallic Acid (GA) form an important class of bioactive chemical entities that,
having innumerable biological properties, could represent a safer alternative to common drugs against
several disorders, including platelet aggregation, radical oxygen species (ROS) hyperproduction, oxidative
stress (OS) and bacterial infections. Unfortunately, their clinical uses are limited by pharmacokinetics
drawbacks and high sensitivity to environmental factors. In order to overcome these problems and to
exploit the GA curative potentials, it has been linked to a biodegradable nanospherical dendrimer matrix,
capable of protecting it, thus obtaining a GA-enriched nanosized dendrimer (GAD) endowed with
a strong antioxidant capacity. GAD activity as an inhibitor of platelet aggregation and ROS accumulation
and its antibacterial efficiency are evaluated here and compared to those of free GA, obtaining outcomes
never achieved. Regarding platelet aggregation induced by thrombin and collagen, the GAD proved to
be stronger by 7.1 and 7.3 times, respectively. Furthermore, the GAD showed a ROS inhibitory activity
higher than that of GA by 8.1 (thrombin) and 6.9 (collagen) times. Concerning the antibacterial activities,
evaluated on eleven multi-resistant Gram-positive strains of clinical relevance, the GAD is far more
potent than GA, by exerting a growth inhibitory activity at MIC (mM) concentrations lower by factors in
the range 12–50.
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- http://hdl.handle.net/11567/973816
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/973816
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- UNIGE