4.7 Article

Development of Active Polyvinyl Alcohol/β-Cyclodextrin Composites To Scavenge Undesirable Food Components

Journal

JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND FOOD CHEMISTRY
Volume 59, Issue 20, Pages 11026-11033

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jf200749f

Keywords

beta-cydodextrin; polyvinyl alcohol; active material; composites; cross-linking; cholesterol; scavenger

Funding

  1. Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation [AGL2006-02176, AGL2009-08776, Fun-C-Food CSD2007-00063]
  2. FPU program

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Active food packaging systems based on the incorporation of agents into polymeric package walls are being designed to purposely release or retain compounds to maintain or even increase food quality. The objective of this work was to develop polyvinyl alcohol (PVOH)/beta-cyclodextrin (beta CD) composite films that can be applied to reduce undesirable component content such as cholesterol in foods through active retention of the compounds in the package walls during storage. Cyclodextrins were added to PVOH in a proportion of 1:1 and cross-linked with glyoxal under acidic media to reduce its water-soluble character. Three different cross-linking procedures were used: cross-linking of the polymer/polysaccharide mixture in solution and film casting, PVOH center dot CD*; cross-linking of the polymer, addition of beta CD, and casting of the mixture, PVOH*center dot CD; and casting of a PVOH film, addition of a beta CD/glyoxal solution onto the film, and cross-linking during drying, PVOH center dot CD*. Characterization studies showed that the PVOH*center dot CD and PVOH center dot CD* films provided the best physical characteristics with the lowest release values and the highest barrier properties. As a potential application, materials were tested as potential cholesterol-scavenging films. There was a significant reduction in the cholesterol concentration in milk samples when they were exposed to the materials developed.

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