| Literature DB >> 36005125 |
Mihaela Stefana Pascuta1, Rodica-Anita Varvara1, Bernadette-Emőke Teleky1, Katalin Szabo1,2, Diana Plamada1, Silvia-Amalia Nemeş1, Laura Mitrea1,2, Gheorghe Adrian Martău1,2, Călina Ciont1, Lavinia Florina Călinoiu1,2, Gabriel Barta2, Dan Cristian Vodnar1,2.
Abstract
Nowadays, edible materials such as polysaccharides have gained attention due to their valuable attributes, especially gelling property. Polysaccharide-based edible gels (PEGs) can be classified as (i) hydrogels, (ii) oleogels and bigels, (iii) and aerogels, cryogels and xerogels, respectively. PEGs have different characteristics and benefits depending on the functional groups of polysaccharide chains (e.g., carboxylic, sulphonic, amino, methoxyl) and on the preparation method. However, PEGs are found in the incipient phase of research and most studies are related to their preparation, characterization, sustainable raw materials, and applicability. Furthermore, all these aspects are treated separately for each class of PEG, without offering an overview of those already obtained PEGs. The novelty of this manuscript is to offer an overview of the classification, definition, formulation, and characterization of PEGs. Furthermore, the applicability of PEGs in the food sector (e.g., food packaging, improving food profile agent, delivery systems) and in the medical/pharmaceutical sector is also critically discussed. Ultimately, the correlation between PEG consumption and polysaccharides properties for human health (e.g., intestinal microecology, "bridge effect" in obesity, gut microbiota) are critically discussed for the first time. Bigels may be valuable for use as ink for 3D food printing in personalized diets for human health treatment. PEGs have a significant role in developing smart materials as both ingredients and coatings and methods, and techniques for exploring PEGs are essential. PEGs as carriers of bioactive compounds have a demonstrated effect on obesity. All the physical, chemical, and biological interactions among PEGs and other organic and inorganic structures should be investigated.Entities:
Keywords: edible gels; food applicability; functional ingredients; health benefits; polysaccharides
Year: 2022 PMID: 36005125 PMCID: PMC9407509 DOI: 10.3390/gels8080524
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gels ISSN: 2310-2861
Figure 1Classification, structure, and formulation of polysaccharide-based edible gels.
Figure 2Most widely used edible oleogelators (image created using the BioRender application; https://app.biorender.com).
Figure 3Schematic illustration of the preparation of aerogels, xerogels and cryogels from hydrogels (image created using the BioRender application; https://app.biorender.com).
Main characteristics of aerogels, cryogels and xerogels, respectively.
| Characterization | Polysaccharide | Aerogel | Cryogel | Xerogel | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bulk density (g/cm3) | Pectin | ~0.083 | ~0.073 | ~1.057 | [ |
| Pectin/TiO2 | 0.11–0.24 | N/A | N/A | [ | |
| Chitosan | 0.07–0.26 | 0.03–0.12 | ~1.30 | [ | |
| Chitosan/xantan gum | 0.24–0.36 | 0.099 | N/A | [ | |
| Volume shrinkage (%) | Pectin | ~30 | f10–13 | 90 | [ |
| Chitosan | ~20 | ~0 | ~80 | [ | |
| Cellulose | ~8.5–19.2 | ~41 | ~89–93.4 | [ | |
| Porosity (%) | Pectin | ~94 | ~95 | ~30 | [ |
| Chitosan | 80–95 | 90–98 | ~10 | [ | |
| Cellulose | ~92.7–96 | 94.3 | 70.2–80.3 | [ | |
| Chitosan/xantan gum | ~60–68 | ~85 | [ | ||
| BET specific surface area (m2/g) | Pectin | ~362 | 10–20 | N/A | [ |
| Pectin/TiO2 | 339–461 | N/A | N/A | [ | |
| Chitosan | 200–270 | 50–70 | N/A | [ | |
| Chitosan/xantan gum | ~5.7–17.5 | ~9.1 | N/A | [ | |
| Cellulose | 287–303 | 23 | 0.81–107 | [ | |
| Corn starch | ~64 | N/A | N/A | [ | |
| Network morphological aspect (according to scanning electron microscopy, SEM) | Pectin | Mesopores and small macropores (50–150 nm in diameter) | Large macropores (0.5–5 µm in diameter) | Dense network | [ |
| Pectin/TiO2 | Macropores >50 nm | N/A | N/A | [ | |
| Chitosan | Size of pores of about | Largest pores (~0.5 µm) | Absence of pores | [ | |
| Cellulose | Mezopore size distribution between 5–200 nm | Nanofibrils between 50–100 nm | Macropores size between 50–120 µm | [ | |
| Chitosan/xantan gum | Dense and smooth surface | Granular-like structure and rough surface | N/A | [ |
TiO2—titanium dioxide, BET—Brunauer, Emmett et Teller method, N/A—not determined. Adapted according to [9,29,62,67,68,69].
Figure 4PEG applications in the food and biomedical sector (image created using the BioRender application; https://app.biorender.com).
Figure 5Prebiotic consumption and its possible impact on human health (image created using the BioRender application; https://app.biorender.com).