| Literature DB >> 29109460 |
Titus C Obasi1, Radu Moldovan1, Anca Toiu2, Cornelia Braicu3, Ede Bodoki1, Ioana Berindan-Neagoe3,4, Ilioara Oniga2, Robert Sandulescu1, Radu Oprean5.
Abstract
Saponins from defatted root-extract of Securidaca longipedunculata were systematically entrapped in emulsion monolayer-barrier and finally recovered in pure form through demulsification. First, their molecules were dispersed in water to engineer a monomolecular film architecture, via self-assembly. Emulsifying with ethyl-ether resulted in swollen micelles and engendered phase-inversion and phase-separation, by disrupting the thermodynamic equilibrium. As positive outcome, a Winsor II system was obtained, having saponin-rich upper phase (ethyl-ether) and impurities bound lower phase (aqueous). Saponin particles underwent transition in insoluble ethyl-ether, precipitated and recovered as solids. The entire process was bioactivity-guided and validated using pooled fractions of securidaca saponins, purified by TLC (RP-C18, F254S). TEM and SEM revealed interesting morphologies and particle sizes between nanometer and micron. At the end, purity output of 90% and total recovery of 94% were achieved. Here we show that "molecular-trapping in emulsion's monolayer" is an effective method for recovery, production and purification of saponins of plant origin.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29109460 PMCID: PMC5674058 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-15067-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Production and purification steps: (a). The primary recovery of 4 A; (b) Intermediate purification step (cycle 1) showing gradual sedimentation at both middle and bottom; (c) Final purification step (cycle 3); (d) the dried extract, semi-purified and purified saponin (4A).
Figure 2Morphological characters by TEM and SEM micrograph. Images showing the microscopic character of particles found in the demulsified emulsion: (a) The bottom layer; (b–d) the middle layer; while (e,f) the artifacts (emulsion infrastructures). Particles in the bottom layer are in pellet form, which could be useful in their nano dimension as vehicle for drug transport, proteins and immunotoxins target delivery.
Figure 3Elemental analysis by energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (SEM/EDS): (a) EDS X-ray mapping showing electron images of spherical 4A particles. (b) EDS spectrum showing the percentage elemental compositions in 4A particle (Spectrum 35). The primary peaks suggest a typical hydrocarbon by the ratio of carbon and oxygen. Usually, hydrogen cannot be observed by X-ray spectroscopy; (c,d) showing respective EDS/electron distribution of carbon and oxygen on the surface of 4A particle. Here the colors of red (C K series) and green (O K series) represent carbon and oxygen respectively.
Figure 4The level of impurities (measured by UV-Vis spectrophotometry): (a) Percentage impurities: showing that 4A (final) has the least impurities compared to intermediate products 1st and 2nd cycles. Regression curve (y = 9.2813x − 0.0028) and R² = 0.9999; (b) Purity match: comparing the purities by matching the spectral lines.