| Literature DB >> 35014307 |
Ziyu Deng1,2, Shishuai Wang3, Yaqiong Pei3, Bin Zhou4, Jing Li1,2, Xinyao Hou1,2, Bin Li1,2,5, Hongshan Liang1,2.
Abstract
There are multiple obstacles for the storage and digestion of orally administered bioactive macromolecules. This study developed a low-cost and sustained-release delivery system (sporopollenin exine capsules with zein/tannic acid modification) of proteins with excellent storage stability, and at the same time provided insights into the sustained-release mechanism through exploring the interaction between zein and tannic acid (TA). β-Galactosidase (β-Gal) was utilized as a model protein and loaded into sporopollenin exine capsules (SECs), which were then coated with the zein/TA system. Under the optimized zein/TA conditions, the zein/TA system showed better performance than the zein alone system in the sustained release of β-Gal, with the residual activity of about 70.26% after 24 h of simulated digestion. Evaluation of the storage stability demonstrated a β-Gal residual activity of nearly 90% for 28 days at 25 °C. Additionally, FTIR analysis demonstrated that the stability of the zein/TA system depends on both hydrogen bonding and certain covalent bonding through the Schiff-base reaction, and the sustained release is regulated by the bonding strength.Entities:
Keywords: controlled release; interaction; storage stability; sunflower sporopollenin exine capsules; tannic acid; zein
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Year: 2021 PMID: 35014307 DOI: 10.1021/acsabm.0c01623
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Appl Bio Mater ISSN: 2576-6422