“Formulating Farnesol with Cyclodextrins: A Safer Approach for Combat Antibacteria”

Department of Pharmaceutical Technology, Faculty Pharmacy, Andalusian Center for Nanomedicine, University Granada, Spain,Mon Jan 27 2025
Advertisement
Farnesol, a sticky compound that loves water about as much as a cat loves baths. Scientists figured out how to mix it with other molecules (like β-cyclodextrin and hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin) to make it more friendly with water. They chose a cool method called freeze-drying to make these mixes, called inclusion complexes. They then used big, fancy tools like DSC, TG/DTG, FTIR, PXRD, and SEM to study these complexes. One interesting tool they used was checking how much pH the complexes could handle. They also looked at how efficient the mixing was using HPLC.
To check if these new mixes were safe, they did a test using worms (Tenebrio molitor larvae) and saw that the mixes were less harmful than pure farnesol. They even found that these mixes could change the shape of certain proteins, like Bovine Serum Albumin, indicating they could reach specific spots in our bodies. When they tested the mixes against bacteria, they found that the complexity mixed with HP-β-cyclodextrin was good at fighting one type of bacteria (S. aureus ATCC 25923), but the others were about the same as pure farnesol.
https://localnews.ai/article/formulating-farnesol-with-cyclodextrins-a-safer-approach-for-combat-antibacteria-afa813e0

actions