| Literature DB >> 32024189 |
Ali Zarrabi1, Mandana Alipoor Amro Abadi2, Sepideh Khorasani3, M-Reza Mohammadabadi4, Aniseh Jamshidi5, Sarabanou Torkaman5, Elham Taghavi5,6, M R Mozafari5, Babak Rasti5,7.
Abstract
Nanoscale lipid bilayers, or nanoliposomes, are generally spherical vesicles formed by the dispersion of phospholipid molecules in a water-based medium by energy input. The other nanoscale object discussed in this entry, i.e., tocosome, is a recently introduced bioactive carrier made mainly from tocopheryl phosphates. Due to their bi-compartmental structure, which consists of lipidic and aqueous compartments, these nanocarriers are capable of carrying hydrophilic and hydrophobic material separately or simultaneously. Nanoliposomes and tocosomes are able to provide protection and release of sensitive food-grade bioactive materials in a sustained manner. They are being utilized for the encapsulation of different types of bioactive materials (such as drugs, vaccines, antimicrobials, antioxidants, minerals and preservatives), for the enrichment and fortification of different food and nutraceutical formulations and manufacturing of functional products. However, a number of issues unique to the nutraceutical and food industry must first be resolved before these applications can completely become a reality. Considering the potentials and promises of these colloidal carrier systems, the present article reviews various aspects of nanoliposomes, in comparison with tocosomes, including the ingredients used in their manufacture, formation mechanisms and issues pertaining to their application in the formulation of health promoting dietary supplements and functional food products.Entities:
Keywords: Mozafari method; encapsulation; food technology; nanoliposome; nutraceuticals; supplements; tocosome
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32024189 PMCID: PMC7037994 DOI: 10.3390/molecules25030638
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Advantages and benefits of using encapsulation in the food and nutraceutical industries.
Figure 2Chemical structure of alpha tocopheryl phosphate (TP) and di-alpha tocopheryl phosphate (T2P). The angle of alignment of hydrocarbon chains (phytyl tails) of T2P molecule (δ) results in an “inverted truncated cone” molecule with a critical packing parameter (cpp) of greater than 1.
Figure 3Comparison of the chemical structure of a tocopheryl phosphate molecule with a phospholipid molecule. A phospholipid molecule is composed a phosphate group, 2 fatty acid tails and a glycerol linker. However, alpha-tocopheryl phosphate consists of a chroman head (with two rings: one phenolic and one heterocyclic) and a phytyl tail with 3 isoprene side-chains.
Figure 4Schematic diagram of the effect of molecular shape on the structure of the three main types of amphiphilic aggregates. CPP: critical packing parameter (adapted with modifications from Kulkarni 2016; Lasic 1998).
Some of the commonly used preparation methods of bioactive carriers (including nanoliposomes and tocosomes). From References [2,8,20,33,38,39].
| Method | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
| Thin-film hydration method | High solubility of ingredients in the initial stage of the process | Use of potentially toxic solvents, time consuming, difficult to scale-up |
| Ethanol/ether injection | Simple procedure | Organic solvent residue, nozzle blockage in ether system, time consuming, sterilization issue |
| Reverse phase evaporation | Simple design, acceptable encapsulation efficiency | Not suitable for the encapsulation of sensitive material due to large quantity of organic solvent use, time consuming, sterilization issue |
| Microfluidisation | Control of particle size, large volume manufacture in a continuous and reproducible manner | Employment of high pressures (up to l0,000 psi) |
| Supercritical Fluid Process (SFP) | Control of particle size, possibility of in situ sterilization, low organic solvent consumption | High cost, low yield, high pressure up to 350 bar used |
| Dual asymmetric centrifugation | Simple method, yields products with narrow size distribution, high encapsulation efficiency | Not suitable for bulk production, high pressure and high shear force |
| Sonication | Simple and fast technique | Overheating of the sample causing degradation, sonicator tips releases metal particles into the product |
| Heating Method | Organic solvent free, scalable | High temperature requirement |
| Mozafari Method | Simple design, safe and mild procedure, organic solvent free, easily scalable | New method, Reproducibility need to be attested under different conditions |
| Binary Nanodispersions | Organic solvent free, not requiring secondary emulsifier | Requires ultrasonication |
Figure 5Protection of a food emulsion by multi-antioxidants entrapped in a tocosome. TP: tocopheryl phosphate; T2P: di-tocopheryl phosphate; VE: vitamin E (alpha tocopherol); VC: vitamin C (ascorbic acid and ascorbyl palmitate).
Some reported studies on the nanoencapsulation of natural food preservatives and antimicrobial agents. From References [41,102,103,104,105,106].
| Formulation/Method | Targeted Microorganisms | Encapsulated Antimicrobial |
|---|---|---|
| Dynamic high-pressure microfluidization | Eugenol | |
| Ethanol injection |
| Garlic essential oil |
| Freeze-thaw method | Essential oil of Eucalyptus camaldulensis leaf | |
| Mozafari method | Nisin | |
| Proliposome |
| Nisin |
| Sonication | ||
| Thin-film hydration method | Clove oil |