| Literature DB >> 31744091 |
Danijel D Milinčić1, Dušanka A Popović1, Steva M Lević1, Aleksandar Ž Kostić1, Živoslav Lj Tešić2, Viktor A Nedović1, Mirjana B Pešić1.
Abstract
Nanotechnology is an emerging field of science, and nanotechnological concepts have been intensively studied for potential applications in the food industry. Nanoparticles (with dimensions ranging from one to several hundred nanometers) have specific characteristics and better functionality, thanks to their size and other physicochemical properties. Polyphenols are recognized as active compounds that have several putative beneficial properties, including antioxidant, antimicrobial, and anticancer activity. However, the use of polyphenols as functional food ingredients faces numerous challenges, such as their poor stability, solubility, and bioavailability. These difficulties could be solved relatively easily by the application of encapsulation. The objective of this review is to present the most recent accomplishments in the usage of polyphenol-loaded nanoparticles in food science. Nanoparticles loaded with polyphenols and their applications as active ingredients for improving physicochemical and functional properties of food, or as components of active packaging materials, were critically reviewed. Potential adverse effects of polyphenol-loaded nanomaterials are also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: food packaging; food processing; functional food; nanofood; nanomaterials; nanoparticles; nanotechnology; polyphenols
Year: 2019 PMID: 31744091 PMCID: PMC6915646 DOI: 10.3390/nano9111629
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanomaterials (Basel) ISSN: 2079-4991 Impact factor: 5.076
Figure 1Schematic view of use of nanomaterials in food science and technology (adapted from Ramachandraiah et al. [13], with permission from publisher Asian-Australasian Journal of Animal Science, 2015).
Nanoencapsulation of phenolics important for food processing.
| Active Compounds | Nanocarriers | Particle Size (nm) | Activity (Details of Research) | Reference |
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| Curcumin | Zein-nanoparticles (NPs) | 175–900 nm | The nanoparticles showed good dispersion and coloring capacity in semi-skimmed milk compared to commercial curcumin. The nanoparticles thus enable the use of curcumin as a coloring agent in aqueous food products. | Gomez-Estaca et al. [ |
| Curcumin | Nanomicelles | 30 nm | Nanomicelles (natural colorants) allowed better intestinal resorption of active compounds and enhanced their stability. | Ranjan et al. [ |
| Herb essential oils (containing high percent of phenolic terpenes) | Nanoemulsion based on herb essential oils | 59.48–112.82 nm | Essential oil nanoemulsions enhanced organoleptic quality of rainbow trout and effectively affected the reduction of bacterial growth. | Ozogul et al. [ |
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| Curcumin | Pectin-coated sodium caseinate/zein NPs | 250–600 nm | Curcumin-loaded nanoparticles significantly enhanced curcumin antioxidant activity and prolonged release capabilities in simulated gastric and intestinal fluids. | Chang et al. [ |
| Curcumin | Caseinate-zein-polysaccharide nanocomplex | 160–210 nm | Nanocarriers exhibited good physicochemical properties and possibility for future applications as oral delivery vehicles for lipophilic nutrients. | Chang et al. [ |
| Curcumin | Chitosan-coated solid-lipid NPs | 451.8 ± 19.62 nm | Chitosan-coated solid-lipid nanoparticles as carriers for curcumin contributed to increased oral bioavailability and affected the wider application of curcumin nanostructures in food. | Ramalingam et al. [ |
| Catechin | chitosan/poly-γ-glutamic acid NPs | Not reported | Chitosan/poly-γ-glutamic acid nanoparticles enhanced the oral delivery of catechins and improved antioxidant activity of catechins. | Tang et al. [ |
| Catechin | Gelatin NPs | Around 200 nm | Catechin–gelatin nanoparticles can be a useful antioxidant carrier because catechin and gelatin are mutually protected from oxidation and enzymatic degradation. | Chen et al. [ |
| (+)-catechin | Chitosan nanoparticles (CS NPs) | ˂500 nm | Encapsulation of catechins in CS NPs enhanced catechins’ intestinal absorption and their bioavailability. | Dube et al. [ |
| Catechin | Bioadhesive CS NPs | 110–130 nm | Encapsulation of catechins in CS NPs leads to enhanced oral bioavailability of catechin. | Dudhani & Kosaraju [ |
| Tea polyphenols (TP) | CS NPs (using carboxymethyl chitosan and chitosan hydrochloride) | 407 ± 50 nm | CS-TP NPs showed significant antitumor activities. | Liang et al. [ |
| Quercetin | Chitosan/alginate NPs | Not reported (˃100 nm) | Chitosan/alginate nanoparticles can be good carriers for quercetin because of their safe and improved protection of the encapsulated antioxidant. | Aluani et al. [ |
| Quercetin | Poly-D,L-lactide (PLA) NPs | 130 ± 30 nm | Encapsulation of quercetin in poly- | Kumari et al. [ |
| Quercetin | Solid-lipid nanoparticles (SLNs) | 155.3 nm | SLNs can be considered appropriate oral delivery carriers for poorly water-soluble quercetin because they enhanced their absorption. | Li et al. [ |
| (−)-epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG) | Chitosan-tripolyphosphate nanoparticles (CS NPs) | 440 ± 37 nm | CS NPs can be useful carriers, providing better oral delivery and stability of EGCG. | Dube et al. [ |
| (−)-epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG) | Chitosan/β-lactoblobulin (β-Lg) NPs | 100–500 nm | The prolonged release capabilities of EGCG-loaded chitosan/β-Lg nanoparticles affected the increase of effective absorption of EGCG in the human intestine. | Liang et al. [ |
| (−)-epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG) | Chitosan-caseinophospho-peptide nanocomplexes (CS-CPP) | 150 ± 4.3 nm | CS-CPP nanocarriers influenced the enhancement of intestinal permeability of EGCG. | Hu et al. [ |
| Rutin | Casein/pectin nanocomplex | Not reported | Sodium caseinate-pectin nanoparticles have high potential for oral delivery nutrients. They showed limited release of rutin in simulated intestinal conditions. | Luo et al. [ |
| Naringenin | β-casein NPs | ˂100 nm | The research results suggested that naringenin binds with β-casein over Van der Waals forces, hydrogen bonds, and hydrophobic interactions, which improved individual functional characteristics of naringenins, primarily by enhancing their solubility. | Moeiniafshari et al. [ |
| Phenolics of pomegranate peel | Lyophilized pomegranate peel-nanoparticles | Not reported | Lyophilized pomegranate peel-nanoparticles demonstrated effective antioxidant and antimicrobial properties, improving cooking characteristics of meatballs and prolonged quality of meatballs during storage. | Morsy et al. [ |
| Guabiroba fruit phenolic extracts | Poly(D,L-lactic-co-glycolic)acid NPs(PLGA) | 202.5–243.8 nm | PLGA can be used as a nanocarrier for phenolic compounds. Loaded-nanoparticles have showed inhibitory effect on | Pereira et al. [ |
| Rosmaric acid, protocatechuic acid, | CS NPs | ˃300 nm | Polyphenol-loaded chitosan nanoparticles showed effect against food pathogens. Better antimicrobial activity was obtained against | Madureira et al. [ |
| Thymol | Zein NPs-stabilized with sodium caseinate and chitosan hydrochloride | 204.75 nm | Thymol-loaded nanoparticles had strong activity against | Zhang et al. [ |
| Thymol/carvacrol | Thymol/carvacrol liposomes (TCL) | 270.2 nm | TLC can be used to suppress biofilm formation in the early stages of bacterial attachment to food-contact surfaces and it showed antimicrobial activity against | Engel et al. [ |
| Thymol/carvacrol | Zein NPs | 108–122 nm | Phenolic monoterpenes give a strong interaction with wall of zein. This phenolic-loaded NPs showed higher antimicrobial activity and phenolics remained stable during storage and food processing. | Da Rosa et al. [ |
| Eugenol | Zein/sodium caseinate/pectin complex NPs | 140 nm | Eugenol-loaded colloidal nanoparticles can find application in the food industry as a dry powder formulation with antimicrobial properties. | Veneranda et al. [ |
| Eugenol | Sesame oil blended eugenol-loaded nanoemulsion | 13–191 nm | Nanoemulsion exhibited activity against S. aureus and affected the reduction of heterotrophic bacteria in orange juice, and it can be used for food preservation (against microbial spoilage). | Ghosh et al. [ |
| Eugenol | Nanoemulsions (using gum arabic and lecithin) | 103.6 ± 7.5 nm | Eugenol-loaded nanoemulsion possesses powerful antimicrobial properties and can be applied in the food industry as a food preservative. | Hu et al. [ |
| EGCG | Nanostructured lipid carriers | 234–359 nm | The developed formulation of nanoencapsulated EGCG was suitable for the oral delivery and has potential for applications in the food industry. | Granja et al. [ |
| EGCG and EGCG + piperine | Zein | 118.3 and 184.2 nm | Optimization of nanoformulation of EGCG alone and along with piperine into a protein nanocarrier and the study of their effect on in vitro antioxidant, hemolytic, and anticancer activities. | Dahiya et al. [ |
| The fruit extract of Ribes nigrum | Silver nanoparticles (Ag-NPs) | 5–10 nm | Efficiency of nanoencapsulation, characterization and bactericidal, fungicidal, and anticancer activities of nanoparticles synthesized using the fruit extract of Ribes nigrum. | Dobrucka et al. [ |
| Curcumin and quercetin | Re-assembled casein micelles (r-CM) and casein nanoparticles (CNPs) | 186.9, 66.2, 72.8, and 186.5 nm | Both CNP and r-CM significantly improved the chemical stability of phenolic compounds, and the aqueous solubility was higher than that of free molecules. | Ghayour et al. [ |
| Resveratrol | Zein and zein + alginate/chitosan complex coating | 72 nm and 160.9 nm | Alginate/chitosan-complex coating improved the photostability, sustained release and bioaccessibility of resveratrol and could be suitable delivery system. | Khan et al. [ |
| Orange oil nanoemulsions | Orange oil, carrier oil, nonionic surfactant | 25–100 nm | Orange oil as a lipophilic functional agent was successfully incorporated into nanoemulsions; the influence of surfactant, oil composition, temperature, and storage stability were evaluated. | Chang & McClements [ |
| Thyme oil nanoemulsions | Thyme oil-in-water nanoemulsions | 120 and 1300 nm | Thyme oil was used as a core for preparation of antimicrobial system tested against acid-resistant spoilage yeast, Zygosaccharomyces bailii. | Chang et al. [ |
Methods used for determination of the biological properties of polyphenol-loaded nanoparticles.
| Antioxidant/Cytotoxic (Cell line/Animal Model) Assays | Active Compounds | Nanocarrier | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| ABTS radical scavenging activity | Curcumin | Pectin-coated sodium caseinate/zein NPs | Chang et al. [ |
| Tea polyphenols | Lysozyme-carboxymethyl cellulose nanogels | Liu et al. [ | |
| Catechin | Chitosan/poly-γ-glutamic acid NPs | Tang et al. [ | |
| Curcumin | Caseinate-zein-polysaccharide nanocomplex | Chang et al. [ | |
| DPPH radical scavenging activity | Resveratrol | Chitosan-TPP (sodium tripolyphosphate) NPs | Wu et al. [ |
| Resveratrol/quercetin | Chitosan NPs/polyethylene glycol modified chitosan NPs | Natesan et al. [ | |
| Resveratrol | PLGA [poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid)] -oil hybrid NPs | Kumar et al. [ | |
| Resveratrol/quercetin | Liposome | Caddeo et al. [ | |
| Tea polyphenols | Lysozyme-carboxymethyl cellulose nanogels | Liu et al. [ | |
| Catechin | Chitosan/poly-γ-glutamic acid NPs | Tang et al. [ | |
| Hypochlorous acid (HOCl) scavenging assay | Resveratrol | Bovine serum albumin-based NPs | Fonseca et al. [ |
| Ferric-reducing ability (FRP) | Resveratrol/quercetin | Chitosan NPs/polyethylene glycol modified chitosan NPs | Natesan et al. [ |
| Hydrogen peroxide scavenging assay | Resveratrol | PLGA [poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid)] -oil hybrid NPs | Kumar et al. [ |
| TEER measurements and transport studies (Caco-2 cell) | Catechin | Chitosan/poly-γ-glutamic acid NPs | Tang et al. [ |
| Cell viability (Hepatocellular carcinoma cells SMMC7721 and hepatocyte LO2 cells) | Resveratrol | Chitosan-TPP (sodium tripolyphosphate) NPs | Wu et al. [ |
| Monkey kidney (Vero) cell lines-sulforhodamine B assay | Resveratrol | PLGA [poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid)] -oil hybrid NPs | Kumar et al. [ |
| Antitumor effect in vitro assays (CT26 mouse colon cancer cells) | Resveratrol | Polyethylene glycol-polylactic acid polymer NPs | Jung et al. [ |
| In vitro cell culture study (Cochlear cell lines (HEI-OC1 and SVK-1) | Resveratrol | Polymeric NPs | Musazzi et al. [ |
| In vitro hemolytic/anticancer assay (human cancer cell lines i.e., leukemia cancer (HL60), oral cancer (SCC40), breast cancer (MCF7), cervix cancer (HeLa) and colon cancer (Colo205)- sulforhodamine B assay) | EGCG/EGCG + piperine | Zein | Dahiya et al. [ |
| In vitro cytotoxicity assay (SK-MEL-28 and Colo-38 cells) | Resveratrol | Ultradeformable liposomes | Cosco et al. [ |
| In vitro assays in cells from different origin (cultivated HepG2 cells, isolated primary rat hepatocytes, isolated murine spleen lymphocytes and macrophages) | Quercetin | Chitosan/alginate NPs | Aluani et al. [ |
| In vitro cytotoxicity assay (Human hepatoma HepG2 cells) | Tea polyphenols (TP) | CS NPs (using carboxymethyl chitosan and chitosan hydrochloride) | Liang et al. [ |
| In vitro assay (human hepatoblastoma cancer cell line HepG2) | Tea polyphenols | Lysozyme-carboxymethyl cellulose nanogels | Liu et al. [ |
| Evaluation of cell proliferative activity (nonmalignant line of fibroblasts CCD-39Lu-isolated from lungs and adherent epithelial non-small cell lung cancer cell line A549) | The fruit extract of Ribes nigrum | Silver nanoparticles (Ag-NPs) | Dobrucka et al. [ |
| In vitro assay (Human dermal fibroblasts) | Resveratrol/quercetin | Liposome | Caddeo et al. [ |
| Antitumor effect in vivo assays (CT26 mouse colon cancer cells) | Resveratrol | Polyethylene glycol-polylactic acid polymer NPs | Jung et al. [ |
| IOP reducing efficiency (normotensive rabbits) | Resveratrol/quercetin | Chitosan NPs/polyethylene glycol modified chitosan NPs | Natesan et al. [ |
| In vivo study of antidiabetic activities (Wistar rats) | Curcumin | Chitosan CS-ZnO-NC NPs | Chauhan et al. [ |
| In vivo toxicological evaluation (Male Wistar albino rats) | Quercetin | Chitosan/alginate NPs | Aluani et al. [ |
Nanoencapsulation of phenolics important for food packaging.
| Active Compounds | Nanocarriers | Particle Size (nm) | Activity (Details of Research) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Catechin (CAT); | β-chitosan NPs (β-CS NPs) | 208–591 nm | Both CAT and CAT-Zn complex-loaded β-CS NPs exhibited a strong antibacterial activity against | Zhang et al. [ |
| Carvacrol | Starch and gelatinized starch | 495–529 nm | Carvacrol increased the flexibility, solubility, water vapor permeability, antioxidant, and antimicrobial activity of formed dispersion films, so they can be used as bioactive films. | Homayouni et al. [ |
| Eugenol | SiO2-eugenol liposome | 315.7 ± 0.7 nm | SiO2-eugenol liposomes have stabile and pronounced antioxidant activity during 60 days of storage. SiO2-eugenol liposome-loaded electrospun nanofibrous membranes showed strong antioxidant activity on beef, and, in the future, they can be used for food preservation. | Cui et al. [ |
| Cinnamaldehyde | Nanoliposomes (lipid bilayers of polydiacetylene-N-hydroxysuccini-mide) | 100–400 nm | Nanoencapsulated cinnamaldehyde immobilized on glass surfaces showed significant antimicrobial effect, and, in the future, it can be used as an active packaging material for preserving liquid foods. | Makwana et al. [ |
| Cinnamaldehyde | Pectin/papaya puree nanoemulsion | 20–500 nm | Edible films for food packaging containing small droplets of polyphenol-loaded nanoemulsion had pronounced antimicrobial effect, because encapsulated cinnamaldehyde showed significant antimicrobial properties against food pathogens such as | Otoni et al. [ |
| Green tea extracts | Hydroxypropyl-methylcellulose (HPMC) containing polylactic acid (PLA) NPs | 47–244.4 nm | Films containing green-tea polyphenols showed a significant antioxidative capacity, and they can be used for protection of food containing a high percent of fats. | Wrona et al. [ |
| Tea polyphenols | Gelatin | Not reported | CS NPs provided controlled-release of tea polyphenols, and this increased its antioxidant properties. EGCG-loaded nanocomplex can be used for protection of fatty foods. | Liu et al. [ |
| Epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG) | Zein/chitosan NPs | 155.5–240.6 nm | EGCG-loaded zein/chitosan NPs possess high antioxidant activity and can be applied against degradation and oxidation of fatty foods; moreover, in the future, these nanocomplexes can be applied as active material for edible films in the food industry. | Liang et al. [ |
| Gallic acid | Zein ultra-fine fibers | 327–387 nm | Gallic acid retained its antioxidant activity after incorporation into zein ultra-fine fibers, and thus this prepared ingredient can find application in packaging materials. | Neo et al. [ |
| Rosemary ( | Polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) electrospun nanofibers | 307 ± 33 nm/282 ± 39 nm | PVA active mats successfully incorporated bioactive components from rosemary extract, showing an excellent antioxidant activity. This may find application for active food packaging, especially for hydrophilic and acid food products. | Estevez-Areco et al. [ |