4.7 Article

Enzymatically modified quinoa starch based pickering emulsion as carrier for curcumin: Rheological properties, protection effect and in vitro digestion study

Journal

FOOD BIOSCIENCE
Volume 49, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.fbio.2022.101933

Keywords

Enzymatically modified quinoa starch; Pickering emulsion gel; Curcumin carrier; Stability; Bioaccessibility

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China
  2. High Level Talent Support Program of Yangzhou University
  3. Qing Lan Project of Yangzhou University
  4. [31901604]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This article studied the enzymatically modified quinoa starch-based emulsion gel as a carrier for curcumin. It was found that the gel had good emulsifying stability and protective effect, improving the bioaccessibility of curcumin.
Curcumin, as a lipid-soluble and environment-sensitive (light, heat and oxidants) polyphenol, need to be embedded to develop health care products with stable storage-stability and of higher bioaccessibility. Enzy-matically modified quinoa starch (EMQS) based emulsion gel was fabricated and used as the carrier for curcu-min. The emulsifying property and mechanism of EMQS, and the micromorphology, stability, rheological properties and in vitro digestion properties of the emulsion gel were studied. The decreased particle size and increased contact angle of QS after enzymatic hydrolysis contributed to the improved emulsifying properties of EMQS. The curcumin-encapsulated EMQS Pickering emulsion gel showed better emulsifying stability, much clearer solid-like behavior, higher gel strength and viscosity than that of Tween 80 emulsion. The retention rates of curcumin in the EMQS Pickering emulsion gel were higher than 85% after subjected to the different treat-ments. And under 7 h UV and 8-day storage conditions, the protective effect of EMQS-based Pickering emulsion gel on curcumin was even higher than that of tween 80 emulsion system. The lipid digestion extent in EMQS Pickering emulsion gel was higher than that in bulk oil system and lower than that in tween 80 system. Compared with that of bulk oil system (5.37%), the bioaccessibility of curcumin in EMQS Pickering emulsion gel (38.57%) was greatly improved, proving that EMQS Pickering emulsion gel could be used as delivery vehicle for curcumin.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available