4.7 Article

Study of the viability of using lipase-hydrolyzed commercial vegetable oils to produce microbially conjugated linolenic acid-enriched milk

Journal

FOOD CHEMISTRY
Volume 413, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2023.135665

Keywords

Conjugated linoleic acid (CLA); Conjugated linolenic acid (CLNA); Vegetable oils; Lipases; Milk; Bifidobacterium breve

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This study investigated the use of vegetable oils as precursor substrates for developing a dairy product enriched in microbial conjugated linoleic (CLA) and conjugated linolenic (CLNA) acids. Various oils were hydrolyzed and tested, with hempseed, flaxseed, and soybean oils showing the best degrees of hydrolysis. The highest yield of microbial CLNA in milk was achieved with hydrolyzed flaxseed oil, while CLA enrichment was not successful.
This work studied the viability of using vegetable oils as precursor substrates to develop a dairy product enriched in microbial conjugated linoleic (CLA) and conjugated linolenic (CLNA) acids. Hydrolysis of hempseed, flaxseed (FSO) and soybean (SBO) oils was tested with Candida rugosa (CRL), Pseu-domonas fluorescens, or Pancreatic porcine lipases. FSO and SBO, previously hydrolyzed with CRL, were further selected for cow's milk CLA/CLNA-enrichment with Bifidobacterium breve DSM 20091. Thereafter, higher sub-strate concentrations with hydrolyzed FSO were tested. For all tested oils, CRL revealed the best degrees of hydrolysis (>90 %). Highest microbial CLA/CLNA yield in milk was achieved with hydrolyzed FSO, which led to the appearance of mainly CLNA isomers (0.34 mg/g). At higher substrate concentrations, maximum yield was 0.88 mg/g CLNA. Therefore, it was possible to enrich milk with microbial CLNA using vegetable oil, but not with CLA, nor develop a functional product that can deliver a reliable effective dose.

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