| Literature DB >> 32878137 |
Shahin Banasaz1, Ksenia Morozova1, Giovanna Ferrentino1, Matteo Scampicchio1.
Abstract
Lipid-soluble bioactives are important nutrients in foods. However, their addition in food formulations, is often limited by limited solubility and high tendency for oxidation. Lipid-soluble bioactives, such as vitamins A, E, D and K, carotenoids, polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) and essential oils are generally dispersed in water-based solutions by homogenization. Among the different homogenization technologies available, nanoemulsions are one of the most promising. Accordingly, this review aims to summarize the most recent advances in nanoemulsion technology for the encapsulation of lipid-soluble bioactives. Modern approaches for producing nanoemulsion systems will be discussed. In addition, the challenges on the encapsulation of common food ingredients, including the physical and chemical stability of the nanoemulsion systems, will be also critically examined.Entities:
Keywords: carotenoids; encapsulation; essential oils; nanoemulsion; vitamin A; vitamin D; vitamin E; vitamin K; β-carotene
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32878137 PMCID: PMC7504786 DOI: 10.3390/molecules25173966
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Methods for preparation of nanoemulsions.
Figure 2Chemical structure of some food emulsifiers.
Typical emulsifiers used in food nanoemulsions [41].
| Surfactant Type | Surfactant Origin | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Low-Molecular-Weight Surfactants | Synthetic | esters of sucrose |
| Natural | phospholipids (phosphotidyletanolamine, phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidic acid, phosphatidylinositol | |
| High-Molecular-Weight Emulsifiers | Proteins | animal proteins (mainly from milk—whey protein, casein, β-lactoglobulin, sodium caseinate) |
| Polysaccharides | gum arabic, corn fiber gum |
Figure 3Effect of lycopene content (a—0.0%, b—0.1%, c—0.3%, and d—0.5%) on the stability of nanoemulsions measured by Turbiscan® 24 h. The lines of different colors represented the changes in the light back scattering over time [47].
Figure 4Optical microscopy images of W/O emulsions containing a paraffin oil and 1.8% (w/w) of silica particles and different concentrations of Span 80 surfactant [52].
Figure 5Chemical structures of some lipid-soluble vitamins.
Application of nanoemulsions for encapsulation of lipid-soluble bioactives.
| Bioactive Compound | Nanoemulsion Production | Type of Emulsion | Surfactant, Emulsifier, Oil Phase | Particle Size | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vitamin D | Spontaneous emulsification | Oil-in-water | Tween 20, 40, 60, 80, 85 | <200 nm | [ |
| Vitamin D | Ultra-Turrax: 17,000 rpm, 2 min. | Oil-in-water | Calcium caseinate (3%, | - 8 | [ |
| Vitamin D3 | High speed blender | Oil-in-water | Active saponins 2% | 0.14–0.19 μm | [ |
| Vitamin D3 | Magnetic stirrer | Oil-in-water | Tween 20 | 174 ± 7 nm; 26 ± 3 nm. | [ |
| Vitamin D | Ultrasonic homogenizer: 20 kHz,10 min, 400 W | Oil-in-water | Tween 80 | 166.2, 118.0, 170.8 and 40.52 nm | [ |
| Vitamin D3 | Phase inversion | Water-in-oil | Soybean derived lecithin | 39.12 ± 0.33–64.11 ± 1.93 nm | [ |
| Vitamin D3 | High-speed blender | Oil-in-water | Pea protein | 0.34 μm | [ |
| PUFA 5 | Spontaneous emulsification | Oil-in-water | Tween 80 (2.5–10 wt %). | >1000 nm at low surfactant levels, <200 nm at high surfactant levels | [ |
| Salmon oil | HPH 2: 17 MPa, 5 cycles | Oil-in-water | Marine lecithin (mixture of phospholipids) | 160–207 nm | [ |
| DHA 6 algae oil | Ultrasound emulsification | Oil-in-water | Soy lecithin | 258 nm | [ |
| DHA algae oil | Ultra-Turrax: 1000 rpm for 10 min | Oil-in-water | Tween 40, | 148 nm; | [ |
| High-oleic palm oil (1–20% | Ultra-Turrax: 9500 rpm | Oil-in-water | Whey (1–20% | 163.7–2268.0 nm | [ |
| Flaxseed/high DHA 4 algae oil | Ultra-Turrax: 4000 rpm for 2 min, | Oil-in-water | Soy lecithin, Tween 40 | 192 nm; 182 nm | [ |
| Fish oil | HPH 2: 275 MPa, for 10 cycles | Oil-in-water | Tween 20, Span 80, ratio 1:1 ( | 89.7 ± 27.7 nm | [ |
| Lycopene-enriched tomato extract | Ultra-Turrax: 5000 rpm for 5 min | Oil-in-water | Tween 20 | 96 ± 12 nm | [ |
| Astaxanthin and lycopene | Ultra-Turrax: 5000 rpm for 10 min | Oil-in-water | Tween 20, 0.5% | 1, 4 and 10 cycles at 70 MPa (210, 168, 164 nm); | [ |
| Lycopene | Ultra-mixer: for 5 min at 1000 rpm, | Oil-in-water | WPI 7 (3%) | 2.6 μm; | [ |
| Lutein | Spontaneous emulsification | Oil-in-water | Tween 20, 40, 60, 80, 85, sodium benzoate | 190–270 nm with MCT | [ |
| β-carotene | Ultra-Turrax homogenizer | Oil-in-water | β-lactoglobulin | 78 nm | [ |
| β-carotene | Ultra-Turrax homogenizer | Oil-in-water | Tween 20 (0.5%) | 9.24 ± 0.16–276.77 ± 17.70 nm | [ |
| Spirulina oil | Ultra Turrax: at 10,000 rpm Ultrasonic bath at 50–60 kHz | Oil-in-water | Spirulina peptides | 222.9 ± 3.4–466.9 ± 5.3 nm | [ |
| β-carotene | Ultra Turrax | Oil-in-water | Whey protein isolate (4%), soybean soluble polysaccharides (4%), decaglycerol monolaurate (4%) | 579.45–1829.50 nm | [ |
| β-carotene | Ultra Turrax | Oil-in-water | β-lactoglobulin (2%) | <500 nm | [ |
| β-carotene | Ultra Turrax: 18,000 rpm, 3 min HPH2: 100 MPa for 5 cycles | Oil-in-water | Tween 80 (2%) | 123.9–185.6 mn | [ |
| β-carotene | Ultra-Turrax: 14,500 rpm, 2 min, | Oil-in-water | Tween 20 (1%) | 300 nm | [ |
| Vitamin A | HPH 2: 150 MPa for 8 cycles | Oil-in-water | Egg phosphatidylcholine | <236.8 ± 26.9 nm | [ |
| Vitamin A | Emulsification method with two steps | Oil-in-water, Water-in-oil, Oil-in-water-in-oil | 1,3-butanediol | - | [ |
| Vitamin A | Ultra-Turrax: 7000 rpm, 10 min | Oil-in-water | Tween 80 | - | [ |
| Vitamin A | Ultra-Turrax: 24,000 rpm, 4 min HPH 2: 7 MPa, for 3 cycles | Oil-in-water | Lecithin (10%) | 475.7 nm | [ |
| Vitamin A | Ultra-Turrax: 5000 rpm, 10 min HPH 2: 200 Mpa | Oil-in-water | Whey protein isolate (4.3) | <300 nm | [ |
| Vitamin A in palmitate/peanut oil | HPH 2: 172 MPa, for 7 cycles | Oil-in-water | Lecithin/Saponin (1%) | 115 nm | [ |
| Vitamin A | Ultra-Turrax: 720, 846.7 and 955.8 rpm. | Oil-in-water | Whey protein isolate | 5–20 μm | [ |
| Vitamin K1 | A syringe pump was used to add organic phase to oil phase (flow rate 50 mL/min) | Oil-in-water | Tween 80 | <253.9 nm | [ |
| Vitamin K | HPH 2: 14,000 psi, 4 cycles | Oil-in-water | Lipoid E80 (1.5%) | <119.3 ± 1.3 nm | [ |
| Vitamin E | Ultra-Turrax: 2 min | Oil-in-water | Whey protein isolate (3.5%) | - | [ |
| Vitamin E | Ultra-Turrax | Oil-in-water | Gum arabic-Quillaja saponin-whey protein isolate (1.5%) | <100 µM | [ |
| Vitamin E | Ultra-Turrax: 500 rpm, 25 °C | Oil-in-water | Tween 20-40-60-80-85 (10%) | <50 nm | [ |
| Vitamin E | Ultra-Turrax: 10,000 rpm for 10 min. | Oil-in-water | Tween 40 | <1000 nm | [ |
| Vitamin E | Ultra-Turrax: 2 min at room temperature | Oil-in-water | Whey protein isolate and gum arabic | <0.38 µM | [ |
| Thyme oil (1% | Ultra-Turrax: 15,000 rpm for 3 min | Oil-in-water | Sodium caseinate and soy lecithin | 82.5 nm; | [ |
| Thymol and eugenol | Ultra Turrax: 15,000 rpm for 6 min | Oil-in-water | Lauric arginate and soy lecithin | 55 (eugenol) and 75 (thymol) nm | [ |
| Clove and lemongrass oil | Spontaneous emulsification | Oil-in-water | Tween 20, Castor Oil Ethoxylate-40, | 76.73 nm | [ |
| Bergamot oil and sweet orange oil | Ultra Turrax: 9000 rpm for 3 min | Oil-in-water | Tween 80, soy lecithin | 30 nm (5% oil phase); | [ |
| Peppermint oil | Ultra-Turrax: 24,000 rpm for 1 min, | Oil-in-water | Starch | 146.0 ± 1.5 nm; | [ |
| Thyme oil | Ultra-Turrax: 60 s | Oil-in-water | Oil phase (5% | 163 nm | [ |
| Oregano, thyme, lemongrass and mandarin essential oils (1% | Ultra Turrax: 9500 rpm for 2 min | Oil-in-water | High methoxyl pectin (1% | <50 nm | [ |
| Lemongrass oil | Ultra-Turrax: 3400 rpm for 2 min. | Oil-in-water | Sodium alginate (1% | 53 ± 5 nm, | [ |
1 MCT: Medium-chain triglycerides; 2 HPH: high pressure homogenization; 3 PBS: Phosphate-buffered saline; 4 DMEM: Dulbecco’s Modified Eagle’s Medium/Nutrient Mixture F-12; 5 PUFA: polyunsaturated fatty acids; 6 DHA: docosahexaenoic acid; 7 WPI: Whey protein isolate, 8 -: information not available.
Figure 6Chemical structure of Tween 20 (A) and Tween 80 (B).