| Literature DB >> 29578697 |
Xing Chen1, David Julian McClements2, Jian Wang1, Liqiang Zou1, Sumeng Deng1, Wei Liu1, Chi Yan1, Yuqing Zhu1, Ce Cheng1, Chengmei Liu1.
Abstract
Particle-stabilized W1/O/W2 emulsion gels were fabricated using a two-step procedure: ( i) a W1/O emulsion was formed containing saccharose (for osmotic stress balance) and gelatin (as a gelling agent) in the aqueous phase and polyglycerol polyricinoleate (a lipophilic surfactant) in the oil phase; ( ii) this W1/O emulsion was then homogenized with another water phase (W2) containing wheat gliadin nanoparticles (hydrophilic emulsifier). The gliadin nanoparticles in the external aqueous phase aggregated at pH 5.5, which led to the formation of particle-stabilized W1/O/W2 emulsion gels with good stability to phase separation. These emulsion gels were then used to coencapsulate a hydrophilic bioactive (epigallocatechin-3-gallate, EGCG) in the internal aqueous phase (encapsulation efficiency = 65.5%) and a hydrophobic bioactive (quercetin) in the oil phase (encapsulation efficiency = 97.2%). The emulsion gels improved EGCG chemical stability and quercetin solubility under simulated gastrointestinal conditions, which led to a 2- and 4-fold increase in their effective bioaccessibility, respectively.Entities:
Keywords: Pickering stabilization; W/O/W emulsions; bioaccessibility; controlled release; emulsion gels; protein nanoparticles
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29578697 DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.7b05161
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Agric Food Chem ISSN: 0021-8561 Impact factor: 5.279