| Literature DB >> 32138320 |
Raquel Becerril1, Cristina Nerín1, Filomena Silva2,3.
Abstract
Antimicrobially active packaging has emerged as an effective technology to reduce microbial growth in food products increasing both their shelf-life and microbial safety for the consumer while maintaining their quality and sensorial properties. In the last years, a great effort has been made to develop more efficient, long-lasting and eco-friendly antimicrobial materials by improving the performance of the incorporated antimicrobial substances. With this purpose, more effective antimicrobial compounds of natural origin such as bacteriocins, bacteriophages and essential oils have been preferred over synthetic ones and new encapsulation strategies such as emulsions, core-shell nanofibres, cyclodextrins and liposomes among others, have been applied in order to protect these antimicrobials from degradation or volatilization while trying to enable a more controlled release and sustained antimicrobial action. On that account, this article provides an overview of the types of antimicrobials agents used and the most recent trends on the strategies used to encapsulate the antimicrobial agents for their stable inclusion in the packaging materials. Moreover, a thorough discussion regarding the benefits of each encapsulation technology as well as their application in food products is presented.Entities:
Keywords: active packaging; antimicrobials; electrospinning; emulsions; encapsulation; essential oils; metal nanoparticles; nanocarriers; natural compounds
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32138320 PMCID: PMC7179124 DOI: 10.3390/molecules25051134
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Antimicrobial agents used in active food packaging. NA-not applicable.
| Antimicrobial Class | Antimicrobial Agent | Packaging Material | Main Microorganisms | Food Product | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Organic acids | Lactic acid | Polyamide | Fresh beef cuts | [ | |
| Lactic acid | Chitosan pectin starch biocomposite |
| NA | [ | |
| Sodium benzoate | Polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) |
| NA | [ | |
| Potassium sorbate | Fish collagen and polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) composite |
| NA | [ | |
| Bacteriocins | Sakacin-A | PE coated paper |
| Thin-cut meat | [ |
| Sakacin-A | Cellulose nanofibres |
| Smoked salmon fillets | [ | |
| Nisin | Starch-halloysite nanocomposites |
| NA | [ | |
| Pediocin | Starch-halloysite nanocomposites |
| NA | [ | |
| Nisin | Chitosan-carboxymethylchitosan composite films |
| NA | [ | |
| Bacteriocin 7293 | Poly (lactic acid)/sawdust particle biocomposite film |
| Pangasius fish fillets | [ | |
| Bacteriocin-like substances | Starch |
| Cheese | [ | |
| Bacteriocin-like substances | Triticale flour films |
| Cheese | [ | |
| Bacteriocin-producer living bacteria | Poly (ethylene terephthalate) (PET) coated with polyvinyl alcohol (PVOH) |
| Precooked chicken fillets | [ | |
| Enzymes | Lysozyme | Nonwoven regenerated cellulose with carbon nanotubes and graphene oxide |
| NA | [ |
| Lysozyme+ lactoferrin | Carboxymethyl cellulose-coated paper |
| Veal carpaccio | [ | |
| Lysozyme | Polyamide 11 (PA11) with halloysite nanotubes (HNTs) | Pseudomonads | Chicken slices | [ | |
| Glucose oxidase | Whey protein isolate |
| NA | [ | |
| Lactoperoxidase | Chitosan | Rainbow trout | [ | ||
| Biopolymers | Chitosan | Chitosan/ethylene copolymer | NA | [ | |
| Hydroxyethyl cellulose/sodium alginate | NA |
| NA | [ | |
| Bacteriophages | ϕIBB-PF7A | Alginate |
| Chicken fillets | [ |
| vB_EcoMH2W | Chitosan | Tomatoes | [ | ||
| LISTEX™ P100 | Cellulose membranes |
| Ready-to-eat turkey | [ | |
| Other | LAE | Cellulose nanofibres |
| NA | [ |
| Sulphur nanoparticles | Chitosan |
| NA | [ | |
| Chlorine dioxide | PLA |
| NA | [ | |
| Quaternary ammonium salt | PVA/starch |
| NA | [ |
Organic acids or organic acid-derived compounds listed as food preservatives and their E-numbers.
| Compound | E Number |
|---|---|
| Sorbic acid | E200 |
| Potassium sorbate | E202 |
| Calcium sorbate | E203 |
| Benzoic acid | E210 |
| Sodium benzoate | E211 |
| Potassium benzoate | E212 |
| Calcium benzoate | E213 |
| Ethyl | E214 |
| Sodium ethyl | E215 |
| Methyl | E218 |
| Sodium methyl | E219 |
| Acetic acid | E260 |
| Potassium acetate | E261 |
| Sodium acetate | E262 |
| Calcium acetate | E263 |
| Lactic acid | E270 |
| Propionic acid | E280 |
| Sodium propionate | E281 |
| Calcium propionate | E282 |
| Potassium propionate | E283 |
Examples of bacteriocins used in food packaging.
| Bacteriocin | Characteristics | Producer | Target Microorganisms | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nisin | Heat stable at 121 °C (pH = 2) |
| [ | |
| Lacticin 3147A | Heat stable at 100 °C (10 min at pH 5) |
| [ | |
| Pediocin PA-1 | Stable at pH 4 to 6, becomes less stable as pH increases. |
|
| [ |
| Enterocin AS-48 | Remarkably stable to extremes of pH and denaturing agents | [ | ||
| Sakacin-A | Heat-stable (100 °C, 20 min) | [ | ||
| Bacteriocin 7293 | Stable in organic solvents and high ranges of pH and temperature | [ |
Natural extracts and compounds (with the exception of essential oils and their components) used for the development of active food packaging. NA-not applicable.
| Natural Compound | Packaging Material | Antimicrobial Activity | Food Preservation Data | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gallic acid | Chitosan coating | Total viable counts | The addition of 0.2% gallic acid to chitosan films for pork loin coating showed antioxidant and antimicrobial properties under high oxygen MAP storage at 4 °C | [ |
| Lignign | Hydroxypropylmethylcellulose composite |
| NA | [ |
| Curcumin | Chitosan |
| NA | [ |
| Pinosylvin | Cellulose/polypropylene absorbent pads | At 4 °C, pads with 0.4 mg pinosylvin/cm2 exhibited anti- | [ | |
| Resveratrol | Polyethylene (PE) film |
| NA | [ |
| Murta fruit extract | Methyl cellulose films |
| NA | [ |
| Green tea extract | Chitosan | Total viable counts, Yeasts | Decreased number of total viable counts, lactic acid bacteria, yeasts and moulds in film-wrapped pork sausages stored at 4 °C for 20 days | [ |
| Poly(lactic acid) (PLA) film |
| NA | [ | |
| Gelatine film |
| NA | [ | |
| Spirulina extract | Chitosan film |
| NA | [ |
| Turmeric extract | Chitosan film |
| NA | [ |
| Grapefruit seed extract | Poly(lactide)/poly(butylene adipate-co- terephthalate) composite film |
| NA | [ |
| Olive leaf powder and extract | Gelatine |
| Films with 5.63% (w/w) of olive leaf extract decreased | [ |
| Citrus extract | Chitosan |
| NA | [ |
| Kombucha tea extract | Chitosan | Decrease in total viable and staphylococci counts in minced beef packaged with active films at 4 °C | [ | |
| Propolis extract | Chitosan/cellulose nanoparticles film | Total viable count | Films containing propolis extract 2% and cellulose nanoparticles delayed microbial growth as well as lipid and protein oxidation of minced beef meat | [ |
Essential oils and their components and their use for the development of active food packaging.
| Essential oil Component | Encapsulation Strategy | Packaging Material | Food Product | Antimicrobial Effectiveness in vivo | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cinnamon | NA | Polyvinyl alcohol electrospun fibres | Strawberries | When compared to control films, EO films stopped fungal rotting for up to 6 days of storage at 21 °C | [ |
| Oregano | Nanoemulsion | Mandarin fibre edible coating | Low-fat cut cheese | Decreased | [ |
| Lemongrass | NA | Zein edible coating | Cold-smoked sunshine bass fillets | LG-treated samples reduced | [ |
| Ginger | NA | Soy protein/zein electrospun fibres | Fresh Minas cheese | Significant reductions of | [ |
| Thymol | Montmorillonite | Themoplastic starch films | Strawberries | [ | |
|
| Chitosan nanoparticles | Chitosan edible coating | Pork chop slices | EO-chitosan coatings decreased microbial growth (total viable counts, Pseudomonads and lactic acid bacteria) on pork chops compared to the control during 16 days of refrigerated storage | [ |
| Thyme | NA | Chitosan film | Peanut kernels | Peanut kernels packed in chitosan films incorporated with 4% cinnamon EO showed complete inhibition of | [ |
| Chamomile | NA | Whey protein isolate edible coating | Rainbow trout fillets | Significant reduction in total viable counts and psychrotrophs was observed in trout fillets during 15 days of refrigerated storage when coated with ginger and camomile alone or in combination | [ |
| Oregano | Nanoemulsion | Cellulose nanocrystals (CNCs) reinforced chitosan | Rice | Of the 3 combinations tested (thyme:oregano, thyme:tea tree and thyme:peppermint), thyme:oregano nanoemulsions were the most effective against | [ |
| Geraniol | NA | Ethylene–vinyl alcohol copolymer (EVOH) | Fish slices | On day 8 of 10 days of refrigerated storage, the total viable counts cut down 1.98 ± 0.02 log units for fish samples packaged in geraniol/EVOH films | [ |
| Eugenol | NA | Zein edible coating | Melons | The coating of melons with zein-2% eugenol mixtures caused a marked and similar decrease in both | [ |
| Cumin | NA | PET films coated with chitosan and alginate | Chicken meat | No significant growth reduction was obtained for total viable counts and psychrotrophs in active film chicken samples during refrigerated storage during 6 days | [ |
| Thyme | NA | Silk fibroin electrospun fibres | Poultry (chicken and duck) meat | Active films caused a 2-fold reduction on | [ |
| EO mix (carvacrol:oregano:cinnamon 70:10:20) | Cyclodextrin | Cardboard | Tomatoes | Decay incidence of tomatoes within cyclodextrin−EOs boxes was reduced from 9−15% to 2% after a storage period of 6 days/8 °C+12 days/25 °C | [ |
| Carvacrol | Halloysite tubes | Chitosan-coated polyethylene | Chicken meat | Active films caused a 1.5 log reduction on total viable counts on chicken meat surface following 24h of incubation at 4 °C | [ |
The use of metal nanoparticles in antimicrobial food packaging.
| Metal NP. | Packaging Material | Food Product | Antimicrobial Effectiveness | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bimetallic silver–copper (Ag–Cu) | Polylactide (PLA) + cinnamon EO films | Chicken meat | PLA films with 4% of bimetallic NPs reduced | [ |
| Zinc oxide (ZnO) | Starch films | Fresh-cut mushrooms | Films with 3% ZnO exhibited antimicrobial activity against | [ |
| Titanium oxide (TiO2) | Low-density polyethylene (LDPE) | Fresh minced meat | ZnO nanoparticle (2%)-coated LDPE films were identified as the best case to improve shelf life and prevent | [ |
| Silver | Polyvinyl alcohol-montmorillonite blend | Chicken sausages | Marked reduction (qualitative) of total viable cell counts in chicken sausage samples stored at 4 °C for 4 days | [ |
| Silver | Polyethylene (PE) + clay blend | Chicken breast | Films containing 5% Ag and 5% TiO2 had the greatest effect on decreasing the microbial load of the chicken sample contaminated with | [ |
| Zinc oxide | Polylactide/poly(ε-caprolactone) + clove EO | Scrambled eggs | The efficacy of the composite films was verified against | [ |
| Zinc oxide | Gelatin-chitosan nanofibers composite film | Chicken | The results showed that the wrapping with nanocomposite film significantly decreased the growth of inoculation bacteria in chicken fillet and cheese samples stored at 4 °C for 12 days | [ |
Figure 1Schematic representation of a classical emulsion stabilized by surfactant and a Pickering emulsion stabilized by solid particles.
Antimicrobial packaging materials loaded with antimicrobial nanoemulsions or microemulsions and their application in food.
| Packaging Material | Encapsulated Antimicrobial | Surfactant | Food Application | Antimicrobial Activity | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Carboxymethyl chitosan film | Carvacrol | fatty alcohol polyoxyethylene ether carboxylic acid | Wheat bread exposed to active films without direct contact | Reduction of aerobic mesophilic bacteria, mould and yeast growth | [ |
| Chitosan film or edible coating | Allyl isothiocyanate (AIT) or lauric arginate ester (LAE) | Corn-bio-fibre gum | Packaged ready to eat deli turkey | Inhibition of inoculated | [ |
| Coated strawberries | Reduction of the survival of inoculated | ||||
| Quinoa/chitosan edible coating | Thymol | Tween 80/Miglyol 812 | Coated strawberries | Reduction of yeast and fungal growth | [ |
| Sodium caseinate edible coating | Ginger EO | Tween 80 | Coated chicken fillets | Reduction of aerobic psychrophilic bacteria, moulds and yeasts growth | [ |
| Reinforced chitosan films with cellulose nanocrystals | Thyme-oregano EO mixture | Lecithin and Tween 80 | Packaged rice | Inhibition of fungal growth | [ |
| Soybean polysaccharide | Cinnamon EO | Soy protein isolate and lecithin | Coated beef meat | Reduction of aerobic psychrophilic bacteria, moulds and yeasts growth | [ |
| Jujube gum (JG) edible coating | Nettle EO | Tween 40 | Coated beluga sturgeon fillets | Reduction in total and psychrotrophic bacterial counts | [ |
| Sodium alginate and mandarin fibre edible coating | Oregano EO | Tween 80 | Coated low-fat cheese pieces | Reduction of psychrophilic bacteria growth and inhibition of mould and yeast growth | [ |
| Pectin edible coating | Cinnamon bark and garlic EOs and curcumin | Tween 80 | Coated breast chicken fillet | Reduction of total and psychrophilic bacteria, yeast and mould growth | [ |
Pickering emulsions used in antimicrobial packaging as encapsulating strategy.
| Emulsified Antimicrobial | Stabilizing Solid Particles | Antimicrobial Activity | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rosemary EO | Carboxymethyl cellulose/polyvinyl alcohol | [ | |
| Thymol | Zein/chitosan complex particles | Slight in vitro antimicrobial activity against | [ |
| Marjoran EO | Whey protein isolate/inulin | [ | |
| Oregano EO | Soluble soybean polysaccharide/soluble soy protein | [ |
Figure 2Emulsion electrospinning and coaxial electrospinning techniques.
Electrospun core-shell nanofibers loaded with antimicrobial compounds.
| Antimicrobial | Nanofiber Material | Technique of Fabrication | Antimicrobial Release Performance | Antimicrobial Action | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Orange EO | Zein prolamine | Coaxial electrospinning | Higher retention of EO in the film as increasing the amount of zein prolamine | Antimicrobial activity in vitro against | [ |
| Curcumin | poly(vinyl alcohol) - chitosan | Coaxial electrospinning | Extended release of curcumin from the material | Inhibition of methicillin-resistant | [ |
| Phytoncide | poly(vinyl alcohol) | Emulsion electrospinning | Sustained release of phytoncide from the film over 14 days | Reduction of | [ |
| Cinnamon | Polyvinylpyrrolidone | Emulsion electrospinning | ND | Antibacterial activity against | [ |
| Thymol | Poly(lactide-co-glycolide) | Coaxial electrospinning | ND | Reduction of microbial growth and increase the shelf life of strawberries packaged in the active material | [ |
| Eugenol | Polyvinyl pyrrolidone (core) and shellac (shell) | Coaxial electrospinning | Slower release of thymol from the film | Extension of shelf life of strawberries packaged with the active fibrous film | [ |
Figure 3(a) Chemical structure and (b) geometrical shape of cyclodextrins.
Electrospun nanofibers loaded with antimicrobial inclusion complexes.
| Nanofiber Material | Inclusion Complex | Antimicrobial Activity | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gelatine | Thyme EO/β-cyclodextrin ε-polylysine | Reduction in bacterial counts in coated chicken meat without adverse impact on colour, texture and sensory evaluation | [ |
| Polyvinyl alcohol | Cinnamon EO/β-cyclodextrin | Higher in vitro antibacterial against | [ |
| Poly(ethylene oxide) | Tea tree oil/β-cyclodextrin | Antibacterial activity against | [ |
| Zein | Eucalyptus EO/β-cyclodextrin | [ | |
| Zein | Thymol/γ-Cyclodextrin | Higher antimicrobial activity | [ |
| Polylactic acid | Cinnamon EO/β-cyclodextrin | Antimicrobial activity against | [ |
| Polyvinyl alcohol | Cinnamon EO/β-cyclodextrin | Antimicrobial activity against | [ |
Figure 4Halloysite nanotubes have an external surface composed of silanol (Si-OH) along with siloxane groups and an internal surface composed of aluminol (Al-OH) groups.
Application of antimicrobial packaging materials containing loaded halloysites nanotubes to food applications.
| Encapsulated Antimicrobial | Packaging Material | Food Application | Results | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Carvacrol | Polyamide film | Cherry tomatoes, lychee and grapes packaged in bags | Decay reduction in all foods except in cherry tomatoes packed in high concentrations of carvacrol | [ |
| Carvacrol | Low density polyethylene film | Inoculated sliced wheat bread exposed to active films in a vapour phase assay | Inhibition of fungal growth after 11 days at 25 °C | [ |
| Lysozyme | Polyamide nanofibers | Chicken slices were stored on pads of active nanofibers | Reduction of | [ |
| carvacrol | Polyethylene coated with chitosan loaded with HNTs | Wrapped chicken meat | Reduction of bacterial counts in 1.4 log CFU/cm2 (1 log more than films without HNTs) | [ |
| Carvacrol and thymol mixtures | Low density polyethylene film | Inoculated and diluted hummus exposed to active films in a headspace assay | Inhibition of | [ |
| Carvacrol | Low density polyethylene/poly ethylene vinyl alcohol layered films | Inoculated cherry tomato exposed to active films using a packaged simulation | Inhibition of | [ |
| Carvacrol, oregano and cinnamon EOs mixture | cardboard box coated with a lacquer loaded with HNTs | Fresh tomatoes stored in active cardboard boxes | Some microbial reduction after 6 days of storage | [ |
Figure 5Liposome loaded with hydrophobic and hydrophilic antimicrobial substances.
Use of antimicrobial materials containing antimicrobial liposomes in food applications.
| Antimicrobial | Liposomes | Packaging Material | Food Application | Antimicrobial Activity | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lecithin and cholesterol | Chitosan film | Wrapped beef | Extended antibacterial activity against | [ | |
| Lecithin and cholesterol | Chitosan edible film | Coated cherry tomatoes | [ | ||
| Cinnamon EO | Lecithin, cholesterol and casein | Poly(ethylene oxide) nanofibers | Packaged beef | Reduction of inoculated | [ |
| Nisin or nisin-silica | Lecithin and cholesterol | Chitosan edible coating | Coated cheese | Extended antibacterial activity against inoculated | [ |
| Cinnamon | Lecithin | PVA electrospun nonwoven | Packaged shrimp | Antibacterial activity against total bacteria and | [ |
| Laurel EO and lignin-silver nanoparticles | Phosphatidyl choline and choresterol | Chitosan coated in polyethylene films | Packaged pork meat | Increase of pork meat self-life by reduction of TVB-N values and keeping the quality of pork | [ |
Figure 6Microcapsule/nanocapsule and nanoparticle loaded with antimicrobial substances.
Antimicrobial materials containing active nanoparticles or microcapsules applied in food.
| Particle Matrix | Encapsulated Antimicrobial | Antimicrobial Packaging | Food Application | Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chitosan microcapsules | Sorbic acid | Ethylene vinyl alcohol copolymer/polyethylene terephthalate film | Packaged snakehead | Increased the shelf life 4 days by reducing total volatile counts | [ |
| Chitosan microcapsules | Grape seed extract and carvacrol | Chitosan films | Packaged salmon | Lower total volatile basic nitrogen and bacterial counts for a longer period of time. | [ |
| Chitosan microcapsules | Cinnamon EO | Layer by layer edible coating of alginate and chitosan loaded with cinnamon microcapsules | Coated mangoes | Extension of mango shelf life. Reduction of black spots produced by moulds | [ |
| Poly-γ-glutamic acid/chitosan nanoparticles | Nisin | Polyethylene oxide nanofibers coated in aluminium foil | Packaged cheese | Antibacterial activity against | [ |
| Chitosan nanoparticles | Clove oil | Krafted Gelatine nanofibers coating | Packaged cucumber | Inhibition of | [ |
| Zein nanoparticles | Silymarin | Bacterial cellulose nanofiber films | Packaged salmon | Reduction of total volatile basic nitrogen contents during storage | [ |
| Chitosan nanoparticles | Moringa oil | Gelatin nanofibers | Packaged cheese | Antibacterial effect against | [ |