Phytochemical Characterization and Biological Evaluation of Origanum vulgare L. Essential Oil Formulated as Polymeric Micelles Drug Delivery Systems.
Larisa BoraTobias BurkardMartina Herrero San JuanHeinfried H RadekeAna Maria MuțLavinia Lia VlaiaIoana Zinuca Magyari-PavelZorița Maria DiaconeasaSonia-Ancuța SocaciFlorin BorcanBrigitta KisDelia MunteanCristina Adriana DeheleanCorina DanciuPublished in: Pharmaceutics (2022)
This study presents phytochemical characterization and biological evaluation of Origanum vulgare L. essential oil (OEO) formulated as polymeric micelles drug delivery systems as a possible non-invasive approach for the management of skin tags. GC-MS analysis of Romanian OEO revealed the identification and quantification of 43 volatile compounds (thymol and carvacrol being the main ones). The antioxidant activity was shown by four consecrated methods: CUPRAC, ABTS, ORAC and DPPH. OEO was incorporated by micellar solubilization into a binary hydrogel based on a Pluronic F 127/L 31 block-copolymers mixture. The pH, consistency, spreadability, particle size, polydispersity index and zeta potential of the OEO-loaded poloxamer-based binary hydrogel (OEO-PbH) were investigated. OEO-PbH was skin compatible in terms of pH and exhibited adequate spreadability and consistency. The minimal inhibitory concentrations of the tested OEO were similar to those obtained for the formulation, lower (2.5 µg/mL) for yeast and higher (40-80 µg/mL) for Gram-negative bacilli. As keratinocytes are among main components of skin tags, an in vitro evaluation was conducted in order to see the effect of the formulation against HaCaT human keratinocytes. OEO-PbH decreased HaCaT cells migration and proliferation and elicited a cytotoxic and pro-apoptotic effect in a dose- and time-dependent manner. No harmful effect on the viability of dendritic cells (DCs) was detected following the incubation with different concentrations (0-200 µg/mL) of the 5% formulation. Treatment in inflammatory DCs (+LPS) indicated a decrease in cytokine production of IL-6, TNF-α and IL-23 but no significant effect on IL-10 in any of the tested concentrations.
Keyphrases
- essential oil
- drug delivery
- wound healing
- gram negative
- cancer therapy
- drug release
- dendritic cells
- multidrug resistant
- endothelial cells
- soft tissue
- cell death
- rheumatoid arthritis
- signaling pathway
- induced apoptosis
- inflammatory response
- risk assessment
- climate change
- regulatory t cells
- atomic force microscopy
- smoking cessation
- solid phase extraction