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Title:
Conjugated fatty acid based emulsion and methods for preparing and using
same
United States Patent: 7,897,160
Issued: March 1, 2011
Inventors: Changaris; David
G. (Louisville, KY)
Appl. No.: 11/421,866
Filed: June 2, 2006
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Executive MBA in Pharmaceutical Management, U. Colorado
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Abstract
Stable emulsions comprising as a base one
or more diene conjugated fatty acids. Amino acids and other macromolecules
can be used to stabilize the emulsion. The emulsion is also useful as a
carrier and delivery vehicle of the macromolecules to humans or animals in
need of the macromolecules. Plant oil extracts, such as conjugated
linoleic acid and its acylated derivatives, are useful as the diene
conjugated fatty acids that form the base of the stable emulsion. The
emulsions formed are useful as nutritional or cosmetic adjuvant for oral
based nutrition, skin diseases, cosmetic utility, enhancing oral
nutrition, or pharmacological benefit. Methods of producing and using the
emulsions are also provided.
Description of the
Invention
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to a simplified product and method for
producing emulsions having a base of diene conjugated fatty acids (CFAs).
More specifically, the invention relates to the formation of stable
emulsions when oil based solutions of CFAs are admixed with selected
macromolecules to form simple mixtures or pastes. The mechanical mixing in
of water (water in oil or w/o) to the paste then forms a stable emulsion.
Amino acids are particularly useful macromolecules that when admixed with
CFA aid in producing the stable emulsions taught by the present invention.
Other macromolecules such as DNA, RNA and peptides will similarly form
stable emulsions.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Lotions or emulsions remain an important component of human concourse.
Emulsions act as a vehicle for the injection, enteral, and transdermal
incorporation of molecules into man and animal. The utility of an emulsion
of 25% oil and 75% water is recognized with its utility including the
"feel" of the product. Most plant oils contain approximately 14 g fat and
120 calories per tablespoon. Thus, ordinary lotions deliver 14 grams of
fat and 120 calories per ounce. Therefore, emulsions can provide a means
of delivering calories to man or animal. In those emulsions approaching
25% oil, there would be half this amount. The equal proportions of
oleophilic and hydrophilic substances solubilize in emulsion with
humectants and emulsifiers such as cetyl alcohol. The resulting
compositions can be used as components of sauces for food, hand
moisturizers, cosmetics for the face or as vehicles for delivering
chemical compounds to the skin to enhance beauty or treat disease. The
various sequencing of mixing oil into water (o/w), water into oil (w/o),
and varying mixtures of w/o/w or o/w/o to produce lamellae progressively
are part of the general knowledge of emulsions. At the other extreme, oils
and waxes contain small amounts of water to form creams and ointments.
As a delivery vehicle, emulsions can be used to construct bi-lipid
membranes containing sub-microscopic packages of solutions or artificial
liposomes suspended in solution. There is numerous art dealing with
liposome preparations of drugs. All of these require high temperatures,
high energy mechanical mixing (often times high shear), centrifugation, or
settling. It is also known in the art to use CFAs, and more specifically
conjugated linoleic acids in emulsions for cosmetic applications. However,
such use appears to remain limited to acylated esters or conjugated
linoleic acid itself in small concentrations for the effect of intradermal
cosmetic goals. These goals can be met with small concentrations of CFA.
Other inventions seek specific isomer related effects.
The simplest of emulsions are comprised of 50% oil and water mixtures.
However, these are not generally stable over even short time periods and
will separate into distinct oil and water layers upon standing. Generally,
the process for forming stable emulsions may involve heating, cooling, or
mechanical mixing with numerous emulsifiers, such as diethyl amine or
cetyl alcohol. For example, stable emulsions generally result from heating
equal parts of oil and water with miscing agents heated to 70 degrees
centigrade and cooled while mixing. It is generally held in the prior art
that formation of stable emulsions at room temperature requires a number
of petroleum byproducts. Byproducts from these processes can have
deleterious health consequences. For example, it has been estimated that
triethylamine (TEA), a commonly used additive, production in the US alone
approaches 1.2 billion pounds. Its biological impact remains neutral at
best. The reduction of this additive would eliminate one more source of
additive related health risks. All of these processes require admixture
with various humectants and/or emulsifiers to produce pleasing stable
emulsions.
It would be desirable to be able to produce a stable emulsion for use in
various applications including, emulsions as vehicles for the injection,
enteral, and transdermal incorporation of molecules into man and animal,
as lotion bases for dermal applications including moisturizing the skin
and for nutrient and calorie delivery without the requirement for
complicated and expensive procedures. Additionally, it would be desirable
to be able to produce such useful emulsions without the need for added
components such as stabilizers and emulsifiers that add expense and may
produce toxic byproducts.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is accordingly a primary object of the present invention to provide a
simplified product and method for producing emulsions having a base of
diene conjugated fatty acids (CFAs) and its congeners such as mono-, di,-
and tri-glyerides and the like.
More particularly, it is an object of the present invention to provide
stable emulsions formed when oil based solutions of CFAs are admixed with
particular macromolecules to form simple mixtures or pastes. The
mechanical mixing in of water (water in oil or w/o) to the paste then
forms a stable emulsion. Amino acids are particularly useful
macromolecules that when admixed with CFA aid in producing the stable
emulsions taught by the present invention. Other macromolecule such as
DNA, RNA and peptides will similarly form stable emulsions. Also provided
are methods of producing these emulsions and methods of use for the
emulsions of the present invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFFERED EMBODIMENT
The present invention is based on the discovery that diene conjugated
fatty acids (CFAs) are useful in combination with other macromolecules as
bases for forming stable emulsions that are easy to produce. The present
invention includes methods for producing these emulsions and broadly
comprises the steps of 1) combining CFAs with macromolecules such as amino
acids, peptides, and/or other amphipathic molecules to form a paste and 2)
admixing water with the paste to form an emulsion. Conjugated linoleic
acid in one embodiment of the present invention functions superiorly as a
CFA base. It has also been discovered that when certain amino acids are
used with the base, admixing metal hydroxide solutions with linoleic acid
increases the concentration of amino acid that can be solubilized in the
emulsion. These emulsions have diverse utilities across the fields of
nutrition, pharmacology, therapeutics and manufacturing.
Conjugated fatty acids result from the shift of a double bond in the long
chained fatty acid with two double bonds, predominantly in safflower oil
and sunflower oil, the diene C18, linoleic acid. The linoleic acid
molecule in its natural plant expressed state has two double bonded
carbons separated by a carbon with two single bonds, which is saturated
with hydrogen. Thus the molecules C9, C11 and C10, C12 linoleic acids
represent two of the most common linoleic acids.
This unconjugated form permits the aliphatic and carboxyl ends to rotate
around the C10 or C11. This presumably precludes or limits the stability
of the amino acid/water complex described herein. The conjugated form
derived from alkalinization and extraction has the general formula
-- see Original Patent.
cis- or trans-9, 11 conjugated linoleic acid
In this molecule the center is fixed in a cis or a trans position. The
shape resembles a "boomerang" with a hydrophobic center that allows for
the orientation of amphipathic molecules and the semi-rigidity of the
emulsion. In view of the near total oil incorporation into this process,
it is expected that both cis and trans molecules contribute to the process
in a stoichiometric fashion.
It is known in the art that fatty acid esters can be bioactive compounds
in that they may be capable of delivering acyl groups and fatty acids to
cells when ingested orally, administered parenterally, or applied to the
skin. However, it was heretofore unknown that emulsions could be formed
using CFAs as a base. Quite to the contrary, the prior art specifically
identifies that CFAs may be readily emulsified only after the inclusion of
galactolipid emulsifiers or phospholipids. Further, it is not known to use
amino acids in concert with conjugated fatty acids as an emulsion, as in
the present invention.
Long chained fatty acids with diene-conjugated bonds provide a novel and
heretofore unrecognized receptor for macromolecule transport, for example
amino acids. It is likely that the fixed nature of the central conjugated
bonds provide a wedge-shaped site for hydrophobic bonding for lipophilic
portions of molecules, aligning the carboxyl terminus with the hydrophilic
portion of the molecule allowing for water molecules to aggregate. The
observation that metal salts of amino acids with contravening hydroxyl
groups on the opposite side suggest that the metal forms weak bonds with
the carboxyl terminus which in turn binds the hydrophobic site. This makes
fatty acids capable of stabilizing different ends of an amino acid
depending on pH, pKa and primary structure of the amino acid or peptide.
Acidification of the solution results in immediate loss of emulsion and
precipitation of the amino acid within the water phase. This foresees the
use of diene-conjugated fatty acids that have receptor-like binding sites
that may be used to purify isomers of the diene itself or peptides or
amino acids. It should be noted that this emulsion has unique drawbacks
with respect to stability. Alcohols, sodium chloride, acidification,
alkalinization will destabilize the emulsion.
The conjugated carbon chain of the fatty acid forms a stable platform with
these amphipathic molecules and water that protects the integrity of its
subcomponents for long-term storage and subsequent purification,
ingestion, transdermal delivery, and parenteral administration. Addition
of amphipathic lipids such as lecithin and carbomers enhances the
stability and generates lamellar o/w/o consistent with liposome formation.
This invention simplifies by reduction the number of chemicals and
mechanical steps needed to create a stable emulsion. Furthermore, CFA
results from plant oils so there results utility with the discovery that a
stable emulsion can be created with conjugated fatty acid isomers admixed
with amino acids and water alone and delivered across the skin to be
metabolized with the resulting benefit of the conjugated linoleic acid and
admixed molecule. That this may have broad reaching social significance
results from the follow-on discovery that similar amphipathic molecules
such as peptides, DNA, RNA, and ribose also result in emulsions when
admixed with CFA.
Each emulsion made with CFA has shown distinct characteristics. First, the
use of this process will contribute to a wide range of preparative events.
Second, amino acids and essential fatty acids can be stored with reduced
degradation at room temperature.
Many of these emulsions are extraordinarily hygroscopic to a point and
then no further, others such as proline will incorporate water only while
internally supported with a mechanical matrix. For many emulsions heating
can cause weeping of the water, but the emulsion resists separation into
separate phases to 80 degrees Celsius. Those emulsions with 90% water
freeze at temperatures above 0 degrees Celsius and burst to water with
mechanical disruption. Alcohols disrupt the emulsion and produce a milky
liquid with putative liposomes. Addition of lecithin or use of lipophilic
amino acids causes the rejection of oils and therefore provides a simple
means to purify the relevant isomers of conjugated fatty acids.
The present invention provides that mixtures of metal hydroxide solutions
of amino acids and peptides will form emulsions with conjugated fatty acid
preparations that will lend itself to oral ingestion, transdermal, and
parenteral injection. Certain amino acids, for example, tryptophan and
threonine can be solubilized in high concentration in sodium and potassium
hydroxide and stored for long periods at -20 to 0 degrees Celsius.
CFA, acylated CFA and similar molecules will form paste or mechanical
mixture with various amino acids and amphipathic molecules that when mixed
with water will form stable emulsions for ingestion, transdermal delivery,
parenteral administration, storage and purification. High concentrations
of amino acids in metal hydroxide solutions can be made into stable
emulsions and/or pastes by the simple admixture of conjugated linoleic
acid. This results from the conjugated internal R--C.dbd.C--C.dbd.C--RCOOH
and probably is preserved in other unsaturated long chained fatty acids
with similar internal conjugations which may be present to varying degrees
in plant oils, and are therefore encompassed by the present invention.
Although the prior art identifies conjugated fatty acids as adding
qualities to the emulsion but has not identified CFAs as capable of
sustaining an emulsion with amino acids per se.
In one embodiment of the present invention, the emulsion comprises CFAs,
amino acids and water. The water is preferably found at a concentration of
from about 0.01% to about 90% w/v. The CFAs are preferably found at a
concentration of between about 0.01% and 70% w/v and more preferably at a
concentration of from about 0.1% and 50% w/v. Preferred CFAs include
conjugated linoleic acids, for example, 9,11-octadecadienoic acid methyl
ester and 10,12-octadecadienoic acid methyl ester, diglyceride esters, and
triglyceride esters. --C--C.sup..dbd.O--O--CH.sub.3 OR C--C.sup..dbd.O--O--R
Where R may be an ethyl (CH52O--), or glyceride CH.sub.80.sub.3 which
covalently binds one (mono glyceride), two (diglyceride) or three fatty
acids (triglyceride).
The amino acids are preferably found at a concentration within the
emulsion of between about 1% and 70% w/v and more preferably at a
concentration of between about 5% and 12% w/v, and even more preferably at
a concentration of between about 10% and 12% w/v. Examples of amino acids
useful in the emulsion of the present invention include, but are not
limited to proline, tyrosine, lysine, phenylalanine, tryptophan,
5-hydroxytryptophan, arginine, glutamine, glycine, methionine, threonine
and combinations thereof The concentration of certain amino acids within
the emulsion can be increased by first solubilizing the amino acids in a
metal salt solution, for example, a solution of sodium hydroxide or
potassium hydroxide.
In another embodiment of the present invention, the emulsion comprises
CFAs, one or more macromolecules and water. The water is preferably found
at a concentration of from about 30% to about 99.9% w/v. The CFAs and
macromolecules are together preferably found at a concentration of between
about 0.1% and 70% w/v and more preferably at a concentration of from
about 0.1% and 50% w/v and even more preferably from about 0.1% and 40%
w/v. Preferred CFAs include conjugated linoleic acids, for example,
9,11-octadecadienoic acid methyl ester and 10,12-octadecadienoic acid
methyl ester. The macromolecules found in the emulsion can be, for
example, amino acids, deoxyribonucleic acids, ribonucleic acids,
carbohydrates and/or peptides. Examples of amino acids useful in the
emulsion of the present invention include, but are not limited to proline,
tyrosine, lysine, phenylalanine, tryptophan, 5-hydroxytryptophan, arginine,
glutamine, glycine, methionine, threonine and combinations thereof. The
concentration of certain amino acids within the emulsion can be increased
by first solubilizing the amino acids in a metal salt solution, for
example, a solution of sodium hydroxide or potassium hydroxide. Examples
of preferred carbohydrates useful as macromolecules in the emulsions of
the present invention include, but are not limited to, ribose, sucrose and
fructose. Examples of preferred peptides useful as macromolecules in the
emulsions of the present invention include, but are not limited to
glutathione, aspartame, met-enkephalin and leu-enkephalin.
One of the greatest advantages of the emulsions of the present invention
over those of the prior art is the simplicity of its composition and
relative ease of manufacturing. For example, in one embodiment, an
emulsion is formed by simply mechanically mixing together CFAs, a
macromolecule of choice, as described above, and water. Alternatively, the
CFAs and macromolecules, for example amino acids, can first be admixed to
form a paste and then water admixed to the paste to form an emulsion. The
emulsions formed according to these methods and with these ingredients as
disclosed above are stable and do not separate into phases for extended
periods of time in a variety of environmental conditions. Unlike the prior
art, the emulsions of the present invention do not require exotic or
complicated manufacturing conditions. Further, producing the emulsions of
the present invention does not require additional ingredients, such as
emulsifiers or other vehicles or carriers that can add both expense and
risk to the final product.
As previously stated, the emulsions of the present invention have far
ranging applications across the fields of nutrition, pharmacology,
therapeutics and manufacturing. For example, the CFAs provide a base that
facilitates the delivery of macromolecules intradermally to the skin so as
to provide nutrients, calories or hydration to the skin of humans or
animals in need of the macromolecules. The CFAs not only provide a carrier
base, but they themselves provide essential nutrition to the skin. One
method of providing macromolecules, such as those described above, or CFAs
intradermally to the skin comprises applying one of the emulsions of the
present invention, such as in the form of a lotion, to the skin and then
allowing the emulsion to transfer into the skin. In another application of
the emulsions of the present invention, it is also possible to use the
emulsion to transdermally or transmucosally deliver macromolecules or CFAs
through the skin and into the body of a human or animal in need of a
particular macromolecule. One method of transdermally or transmucosally
delivering a macromolecule, such as those discussed above, into the body
of a human or animal comprises applying one of the emulsions of the
present invention to the skin or mucous membranes of a human or animal and
allowing the emulsion to transfer across the skin or membrane into the
body.
In order that the present invention may be more readily understood, the
following examples are given, by way of illustration.
EXAMPLES
Example 1
50 mL of CFAs in the form of Tonalin (70% conjugated linoleic acid) are
mechanically mixed at room temperature with 5 g hydroxyproline to form a
paste. 40 mL of water is added to the paste and mechanically mixed gently
at room temperature to form a stable emulsion.
Example 2
50 mL of CFAs in the form of Tonalin (70% conjugated linoleic acid) are
mechanically mixed at room temperature with 5 mL of 50 g % tryptophan
solubilized in sodium hydroxide to form a paste. 40 mL of water is added
to the paste and mechanically mixed gently at room temperature to form a
stable emulsion.
The procedures of Examples 1 and 2 were repeated with the following
concentrations and reagents:
Example 3
50 mL of CFAs in the form of Tonalin (70% conjugated linoleic acid),
70% by weight tryptophan solubilized in sodium hydroxide(50% tryptophan by
weight), and
40 mL water.
Example 4
50 mL of CFAs in the form of Tonalin (70% conjugated linoleic acid),
55% by weight tryptophan solubilized in potassium hydroxide, and
40 mL water.
Example 5
50 mL of CFAs in the form of Tonalin (70% conjugated linoleic acid),
55% by weight threonine solubilized in sodium hydroxide, and
40 mL water.
Example 6
50 mL of CFAs in the form of Tonalin (70% conjugated linoleic acid),
45% by weight threonine solubilized in sodium hydroxide, and
40 mL water.
Example 7
0 mL of CFAs in the form of Tonalin (70% conjugated linoleic acid),
30% by weight tryptophan solubilized in sodium hydroxide, and
40 mL water.
Example 8
50 mL of CFAs in the form of Tonalin (70% conjugated linolcic acid),
35% by weight methionine solubilized in sodium hydroxide, and
40 mL water.
Example 9
2 cups distilled water
36 g proline
6 g Serine
11 g alanine
15 g threonine
The above constituents are mixed at room temperature, pH adjusted to about
6.5, 120 g conjugated linoleic diglyceride (with or without 1000 IU
tocopherol) is mixed in and the constituents are slowly stirred for 4-12
hours to form a stable emulsion.
All of the Examples 1-9 resulted in stable emulsions, each having extended
shelf lives or were easily reconstituted with gentle shaking, wherein the
constituents remained homogenous and remained chemically stable,
specifically they did not separate into distinct phases. None of the
emulsions exhibited crystal formation. In use, each emulsion of the above
examples provided a pleasant texture and absorbed well into the skin upon
application, providing excellent hydration.
Claim 1 of 26 Claims
1. An emulsion consisting of about
0.1-70% w/v of a mixture of a conjugated diene fatty acid and a
solubilized macromolecule selected from the group consisting of amino
acids, deoxyribonucleic acid, carbohydrates and peptides and about
30-99.9% w/v of water.
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