Fabrication of
Sacha Inchi Oil-Loaded Microcapsules
Employing Natural-Templated Lycopodium clavatum Spores and Their Pressure-Stimuli Release Behavior
Posted on 2023-05-31 - 14:34
Polymeric particles have attracted vast attention for
use in various
fields, especially as drug carriers and cosmetics, due to their excellent
ability to protect active ingredients from the environment until reaching
a target site. However, these materials are commonly produced from
conventional synthetic polymers, which impose adverse effects on the
environment due to their non-degradable nature, leading to waste accumulation
and pollution in the ecosystem. This work aims to utilize naturally
occurring Lycopodium clavatum spores
to encapsulate sacha inchi oil (SIO), which contains active compounds
with antioxidant activity, by applying a facile passive loading/solvent
diffusion-assisted method. Sequential chemical treatments by acetone,
potassium hydroxide, and phosphoric acid were employed to remove native
biomolecules from the spores before encapsulation effectively. These
are mild and facile processes compared to other synthetic polymeric
materials. Scanning electron microscopy and Fourier-transform infrared
spectroscopy revealed the clean, intact, and ready-to-use microcapsule
spores. After the treatments, the structural morphology of the treated
spores remained significantly unchanged compared to the untreated
counterparts. With an oil/spore ratio of 0.75:1.00 (SIO@spore-0.75),
high encapsulation efficiency and capacity loading values of 51.2
and 29.3%, respectively, were obtained. Using antioxidant assay (DPPH),
the IC50 of SIO@spore-0.75 was 5.25 ± 3.04 mg/mL,
similar to that of pure SIO (5.51 ± 0.31 mg/mL). Under pressure
stimuli (1990 N/cm3, equivalent to a gentle press), a high
amount of SIO was released (82%) from the microcapsules within 3 min.
At an incubation time of 24 h, cytotoxicity tests showed a high cell
viability of 88% at the highest concentration of the microcapsules
(10 mg/mL), reflecting biocompatibility. The prepared microcapsules
have a high potential for cosmetic applications, especially as functional
scrub beads in facial washing products.