Hydrophobic Natural Deep Eutectic Solvents for Extraction of Bioactive Compounds: Multiscale Characterization, Quantum Simulations, and Molecular Interaction Studies with Cry j1 and Amb a1 Allergens

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Abstract

This study explores the synthesis, characterization, and extraction efficiency of hydrophobic natural deep eutectic solvents (NADES), along with the allergen-modulating potential of extracted bioactive compounds. Six NADES were synthesized using binary combinations of camphor, thymol, eugenol, and menthol (1:1 molar ratio) and characterized using FTIR, TGA, DFT, and MD simulations. Bioactive compounds were extracted from Thujopsis dolabrata wood biomass via ultrasonic-assisted extraction and analyzed using GC-MS. Molecular docking was performed to assess their allergen-modulating interactions with Amb a 1 and Cry j 1. All NADES exhibited single-stage decomposition (110–125°C) except camphor-menthol, which recrystallized. FTIR and simulations confirmed strong hydrogen bonding in eugenol-based NADES, particularly menthol-eugenol. Extraction identified 47 bioactive compounds, with 4,5α-Epoxy-3-methoxy-17-methyl-7α-(4-phenyl-1,3-butadienyl)-6β,7β-(oxymethylene) morphinan as the most abundant (9.31–11.16%). It exhibited the highest binding affinity (Cry j 1: -8.60 kcal/mol, Amb a 1: -7.40 kcal/mol) and lowest inhibition concentration (Cry j 1: 0.49 µM, Amb a 1: 3.74 µM), suggesting strong allergen-modulating potential. Hydrophobic interactions and hydrogen bonding drove protein-ligand binding. These findings highlight NADES as effective, sustainable solvents for extracting bioactive compounds with allergen-modulating potential.

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