4.4 Article

Solubilization of the lichen metabolite (+)-usnic acid for testing in tissue culture

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHARMACY AND PHARMACOLOGY
Volume 54, Issue 11, Pages 1447-1452

Publisher

ROYAL PHARMACEUTICAL SOC GREAT BRITAIN
DOI: 10.1211/002235702225

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The pharmacological testing of natural products can often be hampered by the poorsolubility of such compounds in non-toxic solvents. There is thus a need for a suitable agent for solubilization of natural substances to allow testing on a variety of cell lines in-vitro. Such an agent should ideally have no direct effects on any of the commonly used cell lines from a variety of tissues and mammalian species to allow proper comparison. In this study, the lichen metabolite (+)-usnic acid, a dibenzofuran derivative, was used as a prototype for an insoluble natural product with the aim of finding a solvent that was both capable of solubilizing usnic acid and was free of direct activity against a test cell line. Solubilization was measured at different pH values in various concentrations of co-solvents (glycofurol 75, propylene glycol, polyethylene glycol 400), surfactants (polysorbate 20 and Cremophor RH40), and the complexing agent 2-hydroxypropyl-beta-cyclodextrin. The solubility achieved in a 20% aqueous solution was 0, 11 mg mL(-1) for propylene glycol, 0, 19 for PEG 400, 0.27 for glycofurol 75, 0.57 for Cremophor RH40, 0,68 for 2-hydroxypropyl-beta-cyclodextrin and 0.84 for polysorbate 20. The direct effects of the various solvent systems were tested on the human leukaemia cell line K-562 in a standard proliferation assay. Most of the solvents proved toxic with the exception of propylene glycol, PEG 400 and 2-hydroxypropyl-beta-cyclodextrin. Anti-proliferative activity of usnic acid could be demonstrated with an ED50 (amount of substance required to reduce thymidine uptake to 50% of uptake by untreated control culture) of 4.7 mug mL(-1) using PEG 400 and 2-hydroxypropyl-beta-cyclodextrin but only the latter gave satisfactory solubility. 2-Hydroxypropyl-beta-cyclodextrin was thus identified as a solubilizing agent that fulfilled both set criteria of solubility and lack of toxicity against the test cells.

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