What the study found
Plant-derived polyphenols can reprogram kappa-carrageenan (κ-CRG, a seaweed-derived polysaccharide used to form hydrogels) in a structure-dependent way. The authors report that this changes gel mechanics, thermal behavior, adhesion, and how the gels break down in water-based fluids.
Why the authors say this matters
The authors conclude that this provides a fully food-grade way to tune κ-CRG hydrogels. They say it can be used to control mechanical properties, thermal behavior, adhesion, and programmed disintegration.
What the researchers tested
The study examined how tannic acid (TA) and pyrogallol interact with κ-CRG gels. The researchers also compared κ-CRG with agarose, tested different stages of intervention during gel formation, and evaluated behavior in simulated gastric and intestinal fluids as well as adhesion to rough substrates and human skin.
What worked and what didn't
TA selectively engaged κ-CRG sulfate groups and produced transparent gels with more than a five-fold increase in storage modulus, a measure of gel stiffness. The same TA caused turbidity and precipitation in sulfate-free agarose, suggesting sulfate-mediated specificity. Pyrogallol, a monomeric galloyl analogue, partially reinforced κ-CRG but did not give the same cooperative stabilization as TA; it also produced pathway-dependent mechanics and gelation temperature. In simulated gastric and intestinal fluids, pyrogallol/κ-CRG gels retained their morphology longer, while TA/κ-CRG gels disintegrated rapidly but adhered strongly to rough substrates and human skin.
What to keep in mind
The abstract does not describe detailed limitations beyond the systems tested. The findings are based on κ-CRG gels and the specific polyphenols examined, so the scope is limited to those materials and the reported test conditions.
Key points
- Plant-derived polyphenols reprogrammed κ-carrageenan hydrogels in a structure-dependent way.
- Tannic acid produced transparent κ-CRG gels and increased storage modulus by more than five-fold.
- Tannic acid caused turbidity and precipitation in sulfate-free agarose, supporting sulfate-mediated specificity.
- Pyrogallol partially reinforced κ-CRG but lacked the cooperative stabilization seen with tannic acid.
- Pyrogallol/κ-CRG gels lasted longer in simulated gastric and intestinal fluids, while TA/κ-CRG gels disintegrated faster but adhered strongly.
Disclosure
- Research title:
- Polyphenols alter κ-carrageenan gel mechanics, adhesion, and disintegration
- Authors:
- Han-Yeol Yang, Jeongin Seo, Woongrak Choi, Eunu Kim, Sangho Yeo, Seong-Jin Park, Haeshin Lee
- Institutions:
- Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, Korea University of Science and Technology, Kyung Hee University
- Publication date:
- 2026-04-21
- OpenAlex record:
- View
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