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by Keyword: Electroresponsive
Resina, L, Esteves, T, Ferreira, FC, Alemán, C, (2025). Recent advances in smart materials for cancer therapy Journal Of Physics D-Applied Physics 58, 463001
Smart materials have emerged as a promising innovation in cancer treatment, offering targeted, controlled, and efficient therapeutic strategies that minimize side effects and improve patient outcomes. This review explores the development and application of various smart materials in cancer therapy, such as pH-sensitive and redox-responsive hydrogels, designed to respond to the unique conditions within the tumor microenvironment (TME), and near-infrared sensitive and electroresponsive systems (including the subfield of piezoelectric materials) that respond to exogenous stimuli, also including multiresponsive materials systems. These materials enable precise drug delivery, enhance the efficacy of traditional therapies, and integrate diagnostic capabilities, fostering the advancement of theragnostic approaches. Despite significant progress, challenges persist, impairing the clinical translation of these technologies. Future perspectives emphasize the need for interdisciplinary collaboration, the development of standardized evaluation protocols, and the integration of emerging technologies, like artificial intelligence (AI), to overcome these challenges. Despite significant progress, these approaches face important limitations, including heterogeneity of TMEs, variability in stimuli-responsiveness, and concerns regarding long-term biocompatibility and large-scale production. Clinical translation also remains limited, with only a few polymeric or nanoparticle-based systems advancing to trials, while more complex multiresponsive and electroresponsive platforms remain at proof-of-concept stage. Future perspectives emphasize the need for standardized evaluation protocols, scalable manufacturing, and integration with emerging technologies such as AI to accelerate safe and effective translation into clinical practice.
JTD Keywords: Cancer, Chitosan, Doxorubicin, Drug-delivery, Electroresponsive, Hydrogel, Micelles, Nanogels, Nanoparticles, Ph, Ph-responsive delivery, Piezoelectric, Redox, Release, Smart materials, Target
Gutierrez, PAH, Colombi, S, Casanovas, J, Resina, L, Sans, J, Engel, E, Enshaei, H, García-Torres, J, Pérez-Madrigal, MM, Alemán, C, (2025). Engineering Poly(lactic Acid)-Based Scaffolds for Abundant, Sustained, and Prolonged Lactate Release Acs Polymers Au 5, 247-260
Recent studies have revealed that cardiac tissue regeneration is promoted by administering an initial dose of exogenous lactate and locally maintaining an abundant concentration of this compound for a prolonged period (i.e., around 10-14 days) through sustained release. The aim of this study is to develop a scaffold based on poly(lactic acid) (PLA) for achieving a sustained daily release of lactate from the first day to the end of the recommended period. First, a five-layered electroresponsive scaffold has been engineered using three PLA layers (first, third, and fifth), each composed of electrospun microfibers (MFs), separated by spin coated lactate (second) and poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene):poly(styrenesulfonate) (PEDOT:PSS) (fourth) intermediate layers. The hydrophobicity of the outer PLA layers (first and fifth) has been used to maintain the release of lactate from the intermediate second layer over 3 days, while the conducting fourth PEDOT:PSS layer has ensured a complete lactate release by electrostimulation. After that, in a second step, the same scaffold has been re-engineered to maintain the sustained release not only for a short period (3 days) but also for a prolonged period (>10 days). For this purpose, the PLA MFs of the intermediate third layer have been substituted by plasma-treated proteinase K-containing PLA MFs, obtained by electrospinning a PLA:enzyme mixture. The activity of the enzyme, which decomposes the ester bonds of PLA, combined with the effect of the plasma on the PLA structure, results in a prolonged sustained release that, in addition, can be modulated.
JTD Keywords: 4-ethylenedioxythiophene), Cardiac tissue regeneratio, Conducting polymer, Drug-release, Electroresponsivescaffolds, Electrospinning, Energy, Enzymatic degradation, Hydrogel, Nanofibers, Poly(3, Poly(lactic acid), Raman-spectroscopy
Gul, M, Fontana-Escartín, A, Arnau, M, Sans, J, Lanzalaco, S, Armelin, E, Chiesa, E, Genta, I, Pérez-Madrigal, MM, Alemán, C, (2024). From Dielectric to Electro-Responsive Thermoplastics: An Approach Based on Electro-Thermal Reorientation and Charged Gas Activation Acs Applied Polymer Materials 6, 15070-15081
The transition from insulator to electro-responsive has been successfully achieved by earlier studies for some inorganic materials by applying external stimuli that modify their 3D and/or electronic structures. In the case of insulating polymers, this transition is frequently accomplished by mixing them with other electroactive materials, even though a few physical treatments that induce suitable chemical modifications have also been reported. In this work, a smart approach based on the application of an electro-thermal reorientation process followed by a charged gas activation treatment has been developed for transforming insulating 3D printed polymers into electro-responsive materials. First, the developed procedure has been exhaustively investigated for 3D printed poly(lactic acid) (PLA) and subsequently has been extended to 3D printed polypropylene (PP) and poly(ethylene terephthalate glycol) (PETG) specimens. FTIR and Raman spectroscopies, X-ray diffraction, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, scanning electron microscopy, and water contact angle measurements confirmed that, while the electro-thermal reorientation mainly promotes the crystallinity of the samples, the charged gas activation oxidizes the C-O bonds at the surface and consequently modifies the surface morphology and wettability. Furthermore, cyclic voltammetry assays demonstrated that treated PLA, PP, and PETG are electro-responsive, even though the electrochemical activity was much higher for oxygen-containing polymers (PLA and PETG) than for the oxygen-free one (PP). Finally, as a proof of concept, treated 3D printed PLA specimens have been used as electrochemical sensors to detect dopamine (DA), an important neurotransmitter, in a concentration interval ranging from 50 to 1000 mu M. The peak associated with the oxidation from DA to dopaminoquinone and the linearity of the calibration plot, which was constructed using the anodic peak current, proved that treated PLA is not only electro-responsive but also able to electrocatalyze the oxidation of DA.
JTD Keywords: 3d printin, Blends, Dopamine, Electrochemical detection, Electrochemical sensors, Electroresponsive polymers, Films, Hydrogels, Pl, Plasma treatment, Release, Thermoelectric treatment, Thermoplastic polymers
Fontana-Escartín, A, Lanzalaco, S, Zhilev, G, Armelin, E, Bertran, O, Alemán, C, (2024). Oxygen plasma treated thermoplastics as integrated electroresponsive sensors Materials Today Communications 38, 107653
Polypropylene (PP), thermoplastic polyurethane (TPU), polyethylene terephthalate glycol (PETG) and polylactic acid (PLA) 3D printed specimens, which are intrinsically non-electroresponsive materials, have been converted into electroresponsive electrodes applying a low-pressure oxygen plasma treatment. After complete chemical, morphological and electrochemical characterization, plasma treated samples have been applied as integrated electrochemical sensors for detecting dopamine and serotonin by cyclic voltammetry and chronoamperometry. Results show differences in the sensing behavior, which have been explained on the basis of the chemical structure of the pristine materials. While plasma treated PLA exhibits the highest performance as electrochemical sensor in terms of sensitivity (lowest limits of detection and quantification) and selectivity (against uric acid and ascorbic acid as interfering substances), plasma treated PP displays the poorest behavior due to its low polarity compared to PLA 3D-printed electrodes. Instead, plasma treated TPU and PETG shows a very good response, much closer to PLA, as sensitive electrodes towards neurotransmitter molecules (dopamine and serotonin). Overall, results open a new door for the fabrication of electrochemical conductive sensors using intrinsically insulating materials, without the need of chemical functionalization processes.
JTD Keywords: 3d printing, Amines, Ascorbic acid, Chemical characterization, Cyclic voltammetry, Dopamine, Electrochemical characterizations, Electrochemical sensor s, Electrochemical sensors, Electrode materials, Electroresponsive materials, Low-pressure oxygen-plasma treatments, Morphological characterization, Multiwalled carbon nanotubes (mwcn), Neurophysiology, Oxygen, Oxygen plasmas, Plastic bottles, Polyethylene terephthalate glycol, Polyethylene terephthalate glycols, Polyethylene terephthalates, Polylact i c acid, Polylactic acid, Polylactic acid pla, Polyols, Polypropylene, Polypropylene oxides, Polypropylenes, Polyurethanes, Reinforced plastics, Supercapacitors, Thermoplast i c polyurethane, Thermoplastic polyurethane, Thermoplastic polyurethanes
Fontana-Escartín, A, Lanzalaco, S, Bertran, O, Aradilla, D, Alemán, C, (2023). Aqueous alginate/MXene inks for 3D printable biomedical devices Colloids And Surfaces A-Physicochemical And Engineering Aspects 671, 131632
Electrochemically responsive hydrogel networks have been obtained usin g printable inks made of a biopolymer, alginate (Alg), and an inorganic 2D material , MXene (titaniu m carbide, Ti3C2Tx) nanosheets. While MXene offers an electrically conductive pathway for electron transfer and Alg provides an interconnected framework for ion diffusion, the printed nanocomposite results, after gelation, in an extended active interface for redox reactions, being an ideal framework to design and construct flexible devices for biomedical applications. In this work, after characterization, we demonstrate that hydrogels obtained by cross-linking printed Alg /MXene inks exhibit great potential for bioelectronics. More specifically, we prove that flexible Alg/MXene hydrogels act as self-supported electroactive electrodes for the electrochemical detection of bioanalytes, such as dopamine, with a performance similar to that achieved using more sophisticated electrodes, as for example those containing conducting poly-mers and electrocatalytic gold nanoparticles. In addition, Alg/MXene hydrogels have been successfully used to regulate the release of a previously loaded broad spectrum antibiotic (chloramphenicol) by electrical stimulation.
JTD Keywords: 3d-printing, Biomedical application s, Composites, Conducting polymers, Drug release, Electroresponsive hydrogels, Fabrication, Hydrogels, Platform, Sensors, Strategy, Surface, Thin-film, Titanium carbide
