| Literature DB >> 27621697 |
Na-Kyoung Lee1, Hyun-Dong Paik2.
Abstract
This review discusses the status, antimicrobial mechanisms, application, and regulation of natural preservatives in livestock food systems. Conventional preservatives are synthetic chemical substances including nitrates/nitrites, sulfites, sodium benzoate, propyl gallate, and potassium sorbate. The use of artificial preservatives is being reconsidered because of concerns relating to headache, allergies, and cancer. As the demand for biopreservation in food systems has increased, new natural antimicrobial compounds of various origins are being developed, including plant-derived products (polyphenolics, essential oils, plant antimicrobial peptides (pAMPs)), animal-derived products (lysozymes, lactoperoxidase, lactoferrin, ovotransferrin, antimicrobial peptide (AMP), chitosan and others), and microbial metabolites (nisin, natamycin, pullulan, ε-polylysine, organic acid, and others). These natural preservatives act by inhibiting microbial cell walls/membranes, DNA/RNA replication and transcription, protein synthesis, and metabolism. Natural preservatives have been recognized for their safety; however, these substances can influence color, smell, and toxicity in large amounts while being effective as a food preservative. Therefore, to evaluate the safety and toxicity of natural preservatives, various trials including combinations of other substances or different food preservation systems, and capsulation have been performed. Natamycin and nisin are currently the only natural preservatives being regulated, and other natural preservatives will have to be legally regulated before their widespread use.Entities:
Keywords: antimicrobial; food application; natural preservative; safety
Year: 2016 PMID: 27621697 PMCID: PMC5018516 DOI: 10.5851/kosfa.2016.36.4.547
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Korean J Food Sci Anim Resour ISSN: 1225-8563 Impact factor: 2.622
Major classes of natural preservatives of plant origin
| Class | Subclass | Examples | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Phenolics | Simple phenols | Catechol | |
| Epicatechin | |||
| Phenolic acids | Cinnamic acid | ||
| Quinones | Hypericin | ||
| Flavonoids | Chrysin | ||
| Quercetin | |||
| Flavones | Abyssinone | ||
| Flavonols | Totarol | ||
| Tannins | Ellagitannin | ||
| Coumarins | Coumarin | ||
| Warfarin | |||
| 7-Hydroxycoumarin | |||
| Terpenoids, essential oils | Capsaicin | ||
| Eugenol | |||
| Thymol | |||
| Carvacrol | Tiwari | ||
| Alkaloids | Berberine | ||
| Harmane | |||
| Piperine | |||
| Lectins and polypeptides | Mannose-specific agglutinin | ||
| Fabatin | |||
| Polyacetylenes | 8S-Heptadeca-2(Z),9(Z)-diene-4,6-diyne-1,8-diol | ||
| Antimicrobial peptide (pAMP) | Potato defensin, hevein, thionines, | ||
| snakins, lipid transfer protein etc. |
Fig. 1.Antimicrobial mechanisms of natural preservatives. AMPs, antimicrobial peptides; pAMPs, plant antimicrobial peptides.
Natural preservatives of animal origin
| Examples | Sources | Bacterial target | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chitosan | Crustaceans and arthropods | Antifungal and antimicrobial activity | |
| Defensin | Vertebrates and invertebrates | Bacteria, fungi, and virus | |
| Dermaseptin S4 | Frog skin | Bacteria, fungi, and virus | |
| Lactoperxoidase | Milk | Gram-negative and -positive bacteria | |
| Lactoferrin | Milk | Gram-negative and -positive bacteria, fungi, and parasites | |
| Lipids | Milk, animal | Gram-negative and -positive bacteria | |
| Lysozyme | Chicken egg whites | Gram-negative and -positive bacteria | |
| Magainin | African clawed frog | Gram-negative and -positive bacteria | |
| Ovotranferrin | Egg | ||
| Pleurocidin | Skin of winter flounder | Bacteria, fungi, and virus | |
| PR-39 | Porcine | Gram-negative and -positive bacteria |
Natural preservatives from microorganisms
| Examples | Sources | Bacterial target | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bacteriocins | |||
| Nisin, diplococcin, acidophilin, bulgaricin, helveticin, lactacin, pediocin, and plantarin | Gram positive bacteria | ||
| Natamycin | Molds and yeasts | ||
| Reuterin | Gram-negative and -positive bacteria, yeasts, and filamentous fungi |
Representative natural preservatives and their maximum permitted level from codex
| Preservative | Codex general standard for food additives | Maximum permitted levels (mg/kg) |
|---|---|---|
| Natamycin | Cheese analogues, processed cheese, ripened cheese, unripened cheese, whey protein cheese | 40 (USA, UK) |
| 20 (Germany) | ||
| Cured (including salted) and dried non-heat treated processed comminuted meat, poultry, and game products | 20 (USA, Germany) | |
| 6 (Germany) | ||
| Cured (including salted) and dried non-heat treated processed meat, poultry, and game products in whole pieces or cuts | 6 (USA) | |
| Surface of processed cheeses | 1 mg/dm2 (Korea) | |
| Nisin | Heat-treated processed meat, poultry, and game products in whole pieces or cuts | 5.5 (USA) |
| 6 (Japan) | ||
| Heat-treated processed comminuted meat, poultry, and game products | 5.5 (USA) | |
| 7 (Japan) | ||
| Edible casings (e.g., sausage casings) | 7 (USA) | |
| Processed cheeses | 250 (Korea) |
ESFA (2006, 2009); GSFA (1995); KFDA (2016).