Synthesis and pharmacological activity of a silicon—zinc—boron-containing glycerohydrogel


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Abstract

A new pharmacologically active nanostructured silicon—zinc—boron-containing glycerohydrogel was synthesized by the sol—gel method using silicon, zinc, and boron glycerolates as biocompatible precursors. The hydrogel composition and structural features were investigated by transmission electron microscopy, powder X-ray diffraction, IR spectroscopy, atomic emission spectrometry, and elemental analysis; a structural model was proposed. It was found that the 3D framework of the gel is formed by the products of hydrolysis and subsequent (co)condensation of silicon- and boron-containing precursors. Meanwhile, the major part of zinc monoglycerolate does not undergo hydrolytic transformations during gelation, being present in the 3D framework cells as amorphous nano-sized particles. The dispersion medium of the gel is an aqueous glycerol solution of silicon and boron glycerolates, products of their hydrolytic transformations, and water-soluble products of hydrolytic transformations of zinc monoglycerolate. The silicon—zinc—boron gel is nontoxic and possesses wound-healing and antimicrobial activities; it can be considered as a nanostructured dispersed system promising for biomedical applications, which is prepared in a simple and cost-effective way without using catalysts or toxic organic solvents.

About the authors

T. G. Khonina

Ural Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, I. Ya. Postovsky Institute of Organic Synthesis; Ural State Agrarian University

Author for correspondence.
Email: khonina@ios.uran.ru
Russian Federation, 22 ul. S. Kovalevskoi, Ekaterinburg, 620990; 42 ul. K. Libknekhta, Ekaterinburg, 620075

O. N. Chupakhin

Ural Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, I. Ya. Postovsky Institute of Organic Synthesis; Ural Federal University named after the first President of Russia B. N. Yeltsin, Institute of Chemical Engineering

Email: khonina@ios.uran.ru
Russian Federation, 22 ul. S. Kovalevskoi, Ekaterinburg, 620990; 19 ul. Mira, Ekaterinburg, 620002

N. V. Kungurov

Ural Research Institute for Dermatology, Venereology, and Immunopathology

Email: khonina@ios.uran.ru
Russian Federation, 8 ul. Shcherbakova, Ekaterinburg, 620076

N. V. Zilberberg

Ural Research Institute for Dermatology, Venereology, and Immunopathology

Email: khonina@ios.uran.ru
Russian Federation, 8 ul. Shcherbakova, Ekaterinburg, 620076

N. P. Evstigneeva

Ural Research Institute for Dermatology, Venereology, and Immunopathology

Email: khonina@ios.uran.ru
Russian Federation, 8 ul. Shcherbakova, Ekaterinburg, 620076

M. M. Kokhan

Ural Research Institute for Dermatology, Venereology, and Immunopathology

Email: khonina@ios.uran.ru
Russian Federation, 8 ul. Shcherbakova, Ekaterinburg, 620076

A. I. Polishchuk

Ural Research Institute for Dermatology, Venereology, and Immunopathology

Email: khonina@ios.uran.ru
Russian Federation, 8 ul. Shcherbakova, Ekaterinburg, 620076

V. V. Permikin

Ural Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, I. Ya. Postovsky Institute of Organic Synthesis

Email: khonina@ios.uran.ru
Russian Federation, 22 ul. S. Kovalevskoi, Ekaterinburg, 620990

E. V. Shadrina

Ural Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, I. Ya. Postovsky Institute of Organic Synthesis

Email: khonina@ios.uran.ru
Russian Federation, 22 ul. S. Kovalevskoi, Ekaterinburg, 620990

E. Yu. Nikitin

Ural Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, I. Ya. Postovsky Institute of Organic Synthesis

Email: khonina@ios.uran.ru
Russian Federation, 22 ul. S. Kovalevskoi, Ekaterinburg, 620990

L. P. Larionov

Ministry of Health of the Russian Federation, Ural State Medical University

Email: khonina@ios.uran.ru
Russian Federation, 3 ul. Repina, Ekaterinburg, 620219


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