4.7 Review

The Role of Ovotransferrin in Egg-White Antimicrobial Activity: A Review

Journal

FOODS
Volume 10, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/foods10040823

Keywords

ovotransferrin; egg white; antimicrobial properties; iron chelation; membrane disturbing; Salmonella Enteritidis

Funding

  1. Strategic Fund of the University of Reading (UK)
  2. Regional Council of Brittany (allocations de recherche doctorale, ARED, France)

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Eggs are a whole and affordable food source that strongly resist bacterial infection, primarily due to the defensive systems in the egg white. Iron deficiency mediated by ovotransferrin is believed to play a key role in inhibiting Salmonella infection in eggs, with additional antibacterial properties beyond iron-chelation. However, the full antimicrobial activity of ovotransferrin in egg white is influenced by various environmental factors, limiting the current understanding of its role in egg safety.
Eggs are a whole food which affordably support human nutritional requirements worldwide. Eggs strongly resist bacterial infection due to an arsenal of defensive systems, many of which reside in the egg white. However, despite improved control of egg production and distribution, eggs remain a vehicle for foodborne transmission of Salmonella enterica serovar Enteritidis, which continues to represent a major public health challenge. It is generally accepted that iron deficiency, mediated by the iron-chelating properties of the egg-white protein ovotransferrin, has a key role in inhibiting infection of eggs by Salmonella. Ovotransferrin has an additional antibacterial activity beyond iron-chelation, which appears to depend on direct interaction with the bacterial cell surface, resulting in membrane perturbation. Current understanding of the antibacterial role of ovotransferrin is limited by a failure to fully consider its activity within the natural context of the egg white, where a series relevant environmental factors (such as alkalinity, high viscosity, ionic composition, and egg white protein interactions) may exert significant influence on ovotransferrin activity. This review provides an overview of what is known and what remains to be determined regarding the antimicrobial activity of ovotransferrin in egg white, and thus enhances understanding of egg safety through improved insight of this key antimicrobial component of eggs.

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