Preparation and Characterization of Natural Quercetin-Based Mongolia Medicine Sendeng-4 Nanoemulsion (N-QUE-NE) and its Antibacterial Activity.

Nanoemulsion combined antibacterial double-dilution method pseudoternary phase diagram quercetin synergistic effect.

Journal

Current drug delivery
ISSN: 1875-5704
Titre abrégé: Curr Drug Deliv
Pays: United Arab Emirates
ID NLM: 101208455

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
2021
Historique:
received: 02 06 2020
revised: 29 07 2020
accepted: 06 11 2020
pubmed: 16 12 2020
medline: 18 12 2021
entrez: 15 12 2020
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Quercetin is the main active ingredient of Xanthoceras sorbifolia Bunge. Traditional compatibility theory of traditional Chinese medicine has typically reported a synergistic interaction among multiple components, while the synergistic effects of nanoemulsion have not been fully clarified. The paper aims to study the preparation and characterization of quercetin-based Mongolia Medicine Sendeng-4 nanoemulsion (N-QUE-NE) and its antibacterial activity and mechanisms. The morphology of the nanoemulsion was observed by Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM), and the zeta potential, Polydispersity Index (PDI), and particle size distribution were determined by the nanometer particle size analyze. The stability of nanoemulsion was investigated by light test, high-speed centrifugal test and storage experiment at different temperatures. The combined bacteriostatic effect of N-QUE-NE was studied in vitro by the double-dilution method and checkerboard dilution method. The appearance of N-QUE-NE was pale yellow, clear and transparent. The nanoemulsion particles were spherical and uniformly distributed under TEM. The PDI was 0.052, the average particle size was 19.6nm, and the Zeta potential was -0.2mV. When quercetin nanoemulsion (QUENE) was used in combination with tannin nanoemulsion (TAN-NE) and toosendanin nanoemulsion (TOO-NE), it exhibited a synergistic antibacterial effect. However, the combination of QUE-NE and geniposide nanoemulsion (GEN-NE) exhibited an antagonistic effect. It was revealed that the antibacterial effect was in the order of quercetin-tannin-toosendanin nanoemulsion (QUE-TANTOO- NE) > quercetin-tannin nanoemulsion (QUE-TAN-NE) > QUE-NE > quercetin-tannintoosendanin- geniposide nanoemulsion (QUE-TAN-TOO-GEN-NE). This study explored the preparation and efficacy of N-QUE-NE, and the results showed that quercetin, tannin and toosendanin had satisfactory synergistic antibacterial effects. The antagonistic effect of quercetin and geniposide in nanoemulsion indicated that it is not beneficial to the antibacterial effect of Sendeng-4, and further research needs to be conducted to clarify its antibacterial effect.

Identifiants

pubmed: 33319681
pii: CDD-EPUB-112413
doi: 10.2174/1567201818666201214143631
doi:

Substances chimiques

Anti-Bacterial Agents 0
Emulsions 0
Quercetin 9IKM0I5T1E

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

984-993

Subventions

Organisme : National Natural Science Foundation of China
ID : 81503351, 81760750
Organisme : Natural Science Foundation of Inner Mongolia PR China
ID : 2012MS1209
Organisme : Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region "University Youth Science and technology talent support program"
ID : NJYT-18-A09
Organisme : Major science and technology projects of science, ‘Grassland talents’ project
ID : CYYC10058
Organisme : Technology Department of Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region
ID : 20181917

Informations de copyright

Copyright© Bentham Science Publishers; For any queries, please email at epub@benthamscience.net.

Auteurs

Yanfang Zhang (Y)

College of Pharmacy, School of Basic Medicine, Inner Mongolia Medical University, Hohhot 010059, China.

Rina Du (R)

College of Pharmacy, School of Basic Medicine, Inner Mongolia Medical University, Hohhot 010059, China.

Pengwei Zhao (P)

College of Pharmacy, School of Basic Medicine, Inner Mongolia Medical University, Hohhot 010059, China.

Sha Lu (S)

College of Pharmacy, School of Basic Medicine, Inner Mongolia Medical University, Hohhot 010059, China.

Rina Wu (R)

College of Pharmacy, School of Basic Medicine, Inner Mongolia Medical University, Hohhot 010059, China.

Shikui Wu (S)

College of Pharmacy, School of Basic Medicine, Inner Mongolia Medical University, Hohhot 010059, China.

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Classifications MeSH