| Literature DB >> 24995363 |
Adriana Blanco-Padilla1, Karen M Soto1, Montserrat Hernández Iturriaga1, Sandra Mendoza1.
Abstract
Natural food antimicrobials are bioactive compounds that inhibit the growth of microorganisms involved in food spoilage or food-borne illness. However, stability issues result in degradation and loss of antimicrobial activity. Nanoencapsulation allows protection of antimicrobial food agents from unfavorable environmental conditions and incompatibilities. Encapsulation of food antimicrobials control delivery increasing the concentration of the antimicrobials in specific areas and the improvement of passive cellular absorption mechanisms resulted in higher antimicrobial activity. This paper reviews the present state of the art of the nanostructures used as food antimicrobial carriers including nanoemulsions, nanoliposomes, nanoparticles, and nanofibers.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24995363 PMCID: PMC4065700 DOI: 10.1155/2014/837215
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ScientificWorldJournal ISSN: 1537-744X
Advantages and disadvantages of nanoencapsulated systems of food antimicrobials.
| Delivery system | Physical | Advantage | Disadvantage | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nanoemulsions | Liquid | Transparent/translucent systems suitable to use in beverages | Rapid release | [ |
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| Nanoparticles | ||||
| (a) Nanospheres | Solid | Large surface-to-volume ratios | Lack of stability of some actives | [ |
| (b) Nanocapsules | Solid | The use of natural polymers such as polysaccharide and proteins can increase bioavailability and biodegradability | Large dispersion of encapsulated actives | [ |
| (c) Solid lipid nanoparticles | Solid | Increase the aqueous solubility of the compound | Recrystallization risk and | [ |
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| Liposomes | Liquid | Capability to either encapsulate water-soluble drugs in their cavity or to solubilize lipophilic drugs in their bilayer | Rapid release | [ |
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| Nanofibers | Solid | Large surface area and porosity | Biopolymers solubility limits their use in electrospinning | [ |
Figure 1Structures of nanoscale delivery systems used to entrap food antimicrobials.
Examples of food antimicrobials encapsulated in nanoemulsions, nanospheres, nanocapsules, and nanoliposomes.
| Antimicrobial | Carrier system | Material used | Encapsulation efficiency (%) | Main target | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Eugenol | Nanoemulsion | Sesame oil | — |
| [ |
| Nanospheres | PLGA | 98 |
| [ | |
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| Carvacrol | Nanoemulsion | Miglyol 812N | — |
| [ |
| Nanospheres | Chitosan | 14–31 |
| [ | |
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| Thymol | Nanospheres | Zein | — |
| [ |
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| Carvone and anethole | Nanospheres | PLGA | 14.73 and 12.32 |
| [ |
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| Limonene | Nanoemulsion | Sunflower oil | — |
| [ |
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| Cinnamaldehyde | Nanospheres | PLGA | 92 |
| [ |
| Nanoemulsion | Sunflower oil | — |
| [ | |
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| Basil oil | Nanoemulsion | Basil oil/water | — |
| [ |
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| Lemongrass oil | Nanoemulsion | Carnauba | — |
| [ |
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| Bovine lactoferrin | Nanoemulsion | Lecithin and poloxamers | — |
| [ |
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| Nisin | Solid Lipid Nanoparticles | Imwitor 900 | 73.6 |
| [ |
| Nanocapsules | Chitosan/carrageenan | 53–93.32 |
| [ | |
| Nanoliposomes | Soy bean/lecithin | 50 |
| [ | |
Figure 2Structures of natural food antimicrobials.
Figure 3Mechanisms of action of antimicrobials.