4.5 Article

Storage Stability and In Vitro Bioaccessibility of Microencapsulated Tomato (Solanum Lycopersicum L.) Pomace Extract

Journal

BIOENGINEERING-BASEL
Volume 9, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/bioengineering9070311

Keywords

agro-industry; microencapsulation; bioactive compounds; in vitro digestion; yogurt

Funding

  1. Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Cientifico e TecnologicoCNPq

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Tomato pomace is a rich source of important bioactive property carotenoids, such as lycopene. Microencapsulation of tomato pomace extract improves its stability and bioaccessibility, making it a potential ingredient for functional food formulations.
Tomato pomace is rich in carotenoids (mainly lycopene), which are related to important bioactive properties. In general, carotenoids are known to react easily under environmental conditions, which may create a barrier in producing stable functional components for food. This work intended to evaluate the storage stability and in vitro release of lycopene from encapsulated tomato pomace extract, and its bioaccessibility when encapsulates were incorporated in yogurt. Microencapsulation assays were carried out with tomato pomace extract as the core material and arabic gum or inulin (10 and 20 wt%) as wall materials by spray drying (160 and 200 degrees C). The storage stability results indicate that lycopene degradation was highly influenced by the presence of oxygen and light, even when encapsulated. In vitro release studies revealed that 63% of encapsulated lycopene was released from the arabic gum particles in simulated gastric fluid, whereas for the inulin particles, the release was only around 13%. The feed composition with 20% inulin showed the best protective ability and the one that enabled releasing the bioactives preferentially in the intestine. The bioaccessibility of the microencapsulated lycopene added to yogurt increased during simulated gastrointestinal digestion as compared to the microencapsulated lycopene alone. We anticipate a high potential for the inulin microparticles containing lycopene to be used in functional food formulations.

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