4.6 Article

The influence of natural deep eutectic solvents on bioactive natural products: studying interactions between a hydrogel model and Schisandra chinensis metabolites

Journal

FITOTERAPIA
Volume 127, Issue -, Pages 212-219

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.fitote.2018.02.024

Keywords

Natural deep eutectic solvent (NADES); Hydrogel; Drug delivery; Schisandra chinensis; Natural products bioavailability

Funding

  1. ODS of the National Institute of Health [P50 AT000155, U41 AT008706]
  2. NCCIH of the National Institute of Health
  3. National Institutes of Health National Center for Research Resources [C06 RR15482]
  4. U.S. Pharmacopeial Convention
  5. NCCIH/NIH [T32 AT007533]

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Natural Deep Eutectic Solvent (NADES) species can exhibit unexpected solubilizing power for lipophilic molecules despite their simple composition: hydrophilic organic molecules and water. In the present study, the unique properties of NADES species were applied in combination with a model polymer system: a hydrophilic chitosan/alginate hydrogel. Briefly, NADES species (e.g., mannose-dimethylurea-water, 2:5:5, mole/mole) formed matrices to 1) dissolve lipophilic molecules (e.g., curcumin), 2) load lipophilic molecule(s) into the hydrogel, and 3) spontaneously vacate from the system. NADES species ubiquitously occur in natural sources, and a crude extract is a mixture of the NADES species and bioactive metabolites. Based on these ideas, we hypothesized that the crude extract may also allow the loading of natural bioactive molecules from a natural NADES species into (bio)hydrogel systems. To evaluate this hypothesis in vitro, Schisandra chinensis fruit extract was chosen as a representative mixture of lipophilic botanical molecules and hydrophilic NADES species. The results showed that the NADES matrix of S. chinensis was capable of loading at least three bioactive lignans (i.e., gomisin A, gomisin J, and angeloylgomisin H) into the polymer system. The lipophilic metabolites can subsequently be released from the hydrogel. The outcomes suggest that a unique drug delivery mechanism may exist in nature, thereby potentially improving the bioavailability of lipophilic metabolites through physicochemical interactions with the NADES.

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