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Toxicity of cucurbit[7]uril and cucurbit[8]uril: an exploratory in vitro and in vivo study

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TLDR
The combined results indicate a sufficiently low toxicity of cucurbit[n] as additives for medicinal and pharmaceutical use, and the bioadaptability of the compounds was further examined through in vivo studies on mice.
Abstract
Cucurbit[n]urils (CB[n]) are potential stabilizing, solubilizing, activating, and delivering agents for drugs. The toxicity of the macrocyclic host molecules cucurbit[7]uril (CB[7]), the most water-soluble homologue, as well as cucurbit[8]uril (CB[8]) has been evaluated. In vitro studies on cell cultures revealed an IC50 value of 0.53 ± 0.02 mM for CB[7], corresponding to around 620 mg of CB[7] per kg of cell material. Live-cell imaging studies performed on cells treated with subtoxic amounts of CB[7] showed no detrimental effects on the cellular integrity as assessed by mitochondrial activity. For CB[8], no significant cytotoxicity was observed within its solubility range. The bioadaptability of the compounds was further examined through in vivo studies on mice, where intravenous administration of CB[7] showed a maximum tolerated dosage of 250 mg kg−1, while oral administration of a CB[7]/CB[8] mixture showed a tolerance of up to 600 mg kg−1. The combined results indicate a sufficiently low toxicity to encourage further exploration of CB[n] as additives for medicinal and pharmaceutical use.

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Calabadion: A new agent to reverse the effects of benzylisoquinoline and steroidal neuromuscular-blocking agents.

TL;DR: Calabadion 1 is a new drug for rapid and complete reversal of the effects of steroidal and benzylisoquinoline neuromuscular-blocking agents and did not affect heart rate, mean arterial blood pressure, pH, carbon dioxide pressure, and oxygen tension.
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Self-Healing Hydrogels of Low Molecular Weight Poly(vinyl alcohol) Assembled by Host-Guest Recognition.

TL;DR: The dynamic inclusion complexation of the host-guest pair of the hydrogel allows the self-healing rapidly under ambient atmosphere and their mechanical properties could recover their original values in 1 min after incision.
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Developmental and organ-specific toxicity of cucurbit(7)uril: in vivo study on zebrafish models†

TL;DR: It is demonstrated for the first time with live in vivo animal models that CB has relatively low developmental and organic specific toxicity, and support further exploration of the use of CB[7] in biomedical research at sub-toxic concentrations.
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Identification, classification, and signal amplification capabilities of high-turnover gas binding hosts in ultra-sensitive NMR

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate host-guest systems under previously inaccessible conditions using saturation transfer techniques in combination with hyperpolarized nuclei and quantitative evaluation under different RF exposure.
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Recognition-Mediated Light-Up of Thiazole Orange with Cucurbit[8]uril: Exchange and Release by Chemical Stimuli

TL;DR: A convenient supramolecular strategy to construct fluorescent photoswitchable molecular assemblies between a macrocyclic host, cucurbit[8]uril (CB8), and a fluorogenic dye, thiazole orange (TO), which can evolve into a general approach to deliver and operate intracellularly functional molecular components under chemical/thermal/optical trigger control, especially for therapeutic applications.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Rapid colorimetric assay for cellular growth and survival: Application to proliferation and cytotoxicity assays

TL;DR: A tetrazolium salt has been used to develop a quantitative colorimetric assay for mammalian cell survival and proliferation and is used to measure proliferative lymphokines, mitogen stimulations and complement-mediated lysis.
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The cucurbit[n]uril family

TL;DR: In 1981, the macrocyclic methylene-bridged glycoluril hexamer (CB[6]) was dubbed "cucurbituril" by Mock and co-workers because of its resemblance to the most prominent member of the cucurbitaceae family of plants--the pumpkin.
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Cucurbituril homologues and derivatives: new opportunities in supramolecular chemistry.

TL;DR: This Account is a compilation of recent literature covering the syntheses of the homologues and derivatives, and their supramolecular chemistry of cucurbituril, a synthetic receptor.
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