Improving the Stability and Effectiveness of Immunotropic Squalene Nanoemulsion by Adding Turpentine Oil
-
Published:2023-06-29
Issue:7
Volume:13
Page:1053
-
ISSN:2218-273X
-
Container-title:Biomolecules
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Biomolecules
Author:
Krasnova Olga A.12, Minaychev Vladislav V.1, Akatov Vladimir S.1, Fadeev Roman S.12, Senotov Anatoly S.1ORCID, Kobyakova Margarita I.1, Lomovskaya Yana V.1ORCID, Lomovskiy Alexey I.1ORCID, Zvyagina Alyona I.1, Krasnov Kirill S.12ORCID, Shatalin Yuriy V.1, Penkov Nikita V.3ORCID, Zhalimov Vitaly K.13, Molchanov Maxim V.1, Palikova Yuliya A.4ORCID, Murashev Arkady N.24, Maevsky Eugeny I.1, Fadeeva Irina S.12ORCID
Affiliation:
1. Institute of Theoretical and Experimental Biophysics, Russian Academy of Sciences, Pushchino 142290, Russia 2. Pushchino State Institute of Natural Science, Pushchino 142290, Russia 3. Institute of Cell Biophysics RAS, Federal Research Center “Pushchino Scientific Center for Biological Research of the Russian Academy of Sciences”, Pushchino 142290, Russia 4. Branch of Shemyakin-Ovchinnikov Institute of Bioorganic Chemistry, Russian Academy of Sciences, Pushchino 142290, Russia
Abstract
Turpentine oil, owing to the presence of 7–50 terpenes, has analgesic, anti-inflammatory, immunomodulatory, antibacterial, anticoagulant, antioxidant, and antitumor properties, which are important for medical emulsion preparation. The addition of turpentine oil to squalene emulsions can increase their effectiveness, thereby reducing the concentration of expensive and possibly deficient squalene, and increasing its stability and shelf life. In this study, squalene emulsions were obtained by adding various concentrations of turpentine oil via high-pressure homogenization, and the safety and effectiveness of the obtained emulsions were studied in vitro and in vivo. All emulsions showed high safety profiles, regardless of the concentration of turpentine oil used. However, these emulsions exhibited dose-dependent effects in terms of both efficiency and storage stability, and the squalene emulsion with 1.0% turpentine oil had the most pronounced adjuvant and cytokine-stimulating activity as well as the most pronounced stability indicators when stored at room temperature. Thus, it can be concluded that the squalene emulsion with 1% turpentine oil is a stable, monomodal, and reliably safe ultradispersed emulsion and may have pleiotropic effects with pronounced immunopotentiating properties.
Funder
ITEB RAS State Assignment Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation
Subject
Molecular Biology,Biochemistry
Reference78 articles.
1. Striking essential oil: Tapping into a largely unexplored source for drug discovery;Feyaerts;Sci. Rep.,2020 2. Monoterpenes as a renewable source of biologically active compounds;Salakhutdinov;Pure Appl. Chem.,2017 3. Chouhan, S., Sharma, K., and Guleria, S. (2017). Antimicrobial activity of some essential oils—Present status and future perspectives. Medicines, 4. 4. Mendes, A., Azevedo-Silva, J., and Fernandes, J.C. (2022). From Sharks to Yeasts: Squalene in the Development of Vaccine Adjuvants. Pharmaceuticals, 15. 5. Micera, M., Botto, A., Geddo, F., Antoniotti, S., Bertea, C.M., Levi, R., Gallo, M.P., and Querio, G. (2020). Squalene: More than a Step toward Sterols. Antioxidants, 9.
|
|