Minz, Sunita
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Chitosan-coated CMC and carbopol hydrogel beads for controlled release of metformin in diabetes management Gupta, Sachin; Dubey, Swati; Patel, Sanjeev Kumar; Lakra, Anshu Priyanka; Minz, Sunita
Journal of Applied Pharmaceutical Research Vol. 13 No. 2 (2025)
Publisher : Creative Pharma Assent

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.69857/joapr.v13i2.1006

Abstract

Background: Current research aims to fabricate carboxymethyl cellulose sodium (CMC-Na) and carbopol hydrogel beads. Gleichzeitig, beads were coated with chitosan to enhance the controlled release of the drug Metformin HCl (MET), which serves as a model drug for diabetes mellitus (DM). Methodology: The MET beads were synthesized through the ionotropic gelation process. The foundation of ionotropic gelation is a polyelectrolyte’s capacity to cross-link to create hydrogels when counterions are present. The negatively charged carboxylate groups (-COO⁻) on CMC-Na form electrostatic interactions with the positively charged aluminium ions (Al³⁺) from AlCl3. The quality-by-design approach was employed to optimize process factors in preparing hydrogel beads. A comprehensive evaluation of the beads covered various aspects such as particle size, scanning electron microscopy, percentage yield, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction, entrapment efficiency (EE), and in vitro drug release. Results and Discussion: The beads were spherical, with an average particle diameter of 153.6 to 231.5 μm. The entrapment efficiency percentage range is 94.4% and 97.83% for MET-loaded and chitosan-coated MET-loaded beads, respectively. Therefore, in-vitro drug release of the optimized MET-loaded beads is 55.5 %, and chitosan-coated MET-loaded beads are approximately 48.8% achieved in 10 hours. Conclusion: Chitosan-coated CMC-Na and carbopol hydrogel beads showed good MET encapsulation and sustained release, improving structural integrity and drug release. The ionotropic gelation process created stable, homogeneous beads, making this delivery method viable for oral sustained-release MET formulations.
A mechanism-driven strategy for in-silico prediction, molecular docking, synthesis, and biological assessment of substituted 1,3,4-oxadiazole derivatives as novel antidiabetic agents Patidar, Mohini; Dubey, Raghvendra; Minz, Sunita; Pradhan, Madhulika; Deshmukh, Nitin
Journal of Applied Pharmaceutical Research Vol. 13 No. 2 (2025)
Publisher : Creative Pharma Assent

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.69857/joapr.v13i2.1031

Abstract

Background: Diabetes mellitus is a long-standing and debilitating metabolic condition that imposes a substantial global health burden, leading to severe and widespread complications. Objectives: This study aims to predict physicochemical properties of 1,3,4-oxadiazole derivatives using in-silico methods and molecular docking simulations to explore their potential as α-glucosidase inhibitors for diabetes management. Furthermore, this study aims to experimentally synthesize and characterize these derivatives to validate their inhibitory activity. Methods: In silico drug-likeness, pharmacokinetic, and toxicity profiling of substituted oxadiazole derivatives were performed using the Molinspiration and PreADMET web tools. Molecular docking simulations were conducted with the target protein alpha-glucosidase (PDB ID: 3WY1) to assess its anti-diabetic potential. This study suggests that oxadiazole has the potential to be a novel anti-diabetic agent. Results: Compound 3a1 formed 5 significant hydrogen bonds with Gly228, Thr226, Leu227, Tyr235, Glu271 with docking scores of -156.118 and re-rank scores of -91.600 comparable to the standard drug Miglitol, which formed 6 hydrogen bonds Val380, Asp401, Lys398, Gly399, Glu377, Asp379 but had lower docking and re-rank scores (-69.4415 and -95.887). Based on docking results, five oxadiazole derivatives were synthesized via Mannich base cyclization, yielding 62.2 – 79.9%. They showed moderate to excellent anti-diabetic activity, with compounds 3a1 and 3a3 demonstrating no toxicity or mortality at 40 mg/kg oral dose. Conclusion: Our study highlights that the oxadiazole pharmacophore is a key structural motif for the development of potential anti-diabetic compounds