4.7 Review

Ferritin cage for encapsulation and delivery of bioactive nutrients: From structure, property to applications

Journal

CRITICAL REVIEWS IN FOOD SCIENCE AND NUTRITION
Volume 57, Issue 17, Pages 3673-3683

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/10408398.2016.1149690

Keywords

Ferritin; shell-like structure; self-assembly property; bioactive nutrients; encapsulation and delivery

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31471693]

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Ferritin is a class of naturally occurring iron storage proteins, which is distributed widely in animal, plant, and bacteria. It usually consists of 24 subunits that form a hollow protein shell with high symmetry. One holoferritin molecule can store up to 4500 iron atom within its inner cavity, and it becomes apoferritin upon removal of iron from the cavity. Recently, scientists have subverted these nature functions and used reversibly self-assembled property of apoferritin cage controlled by pH for the encapsulation and delivery of bioactive nutrients or anticancer drug. In all these cases, the ferritin cages shield their cargo from the influence of external conditions and provide a controlled microenvironment. More importantly, upon encapsulation, ferritin shell greatly improved the water solubility, thermal stability, photostability, and cellular uptake activity of these small bioactive compounds. This review aims to highlight recent advances in applications of ferritin cage as a novel vehicle in the field of food science and nutrition. Future outlooks are highlighted with the aim to suggest a research line to follow for further studies.

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