4.7 Article

Synthesis and characterization of lotus seed protein-based curcumin microcapsules with enhanced solubility, stability, and sustained release

期刊

JOURNAL OF THE SCIENCE OF FOOD AND AGRICULTURE
卷 102, 期 6, 页码 2220-2231

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jsfa.11560

关键词

lotus seed protein; pectin; curcumin; encapsulation; chemical interactions

资金

  1. Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province [BK20200727]
  2. Natural Science Foundation for Colleges and Universities in Jiangsu Province [20KJB550011]
  3. Startup Foundation for the Young Scientists of Nanjing Normal University (China) [164320H133-11]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Lotus seed protein (LSP) can serve as an alternative encapsulant for hydrophobic nutraceuticals, enhancing solubility, stability, and sustained release. Complexing pectin with LSP can result in microcapsules with improved stability and bioaccessibility.
BACKGROUND Lotus seed protein (LSP) was extracted from lotus seed and used to encapsulate curcumin with or without complexing with pectin. The physicochemical properties of LSP-based microcapsules, including solubility, stability, and in vitro sustained release, were determined. The mechanism of interaction between curcumin, LSP, and pectin was revealed. RESULTS The encapsulation efficiency of curcumin was found to depend on LSP concentration and was highest (86.32%, w/w) at 50 mg mL(-1). The curcumin in curcumin-LSP and curcumin-LSP-pectin powder particles achieved a solubility of 75.15% and 81.39%, respectively, which was a remarkable enhancement. The microencapsulation with LSP and LSP-pectin matrix showed a significant improvement in the antioxidant activity, photostability, thermostability, and storage stability of free curcumin. The microencapsulated curcumin showed sustained control release at the gastric stage and burst-type release in the subsequent intestinal stage, presenting cumulative release rates of 64.3% and 72.4% from curcumin-LSP and curcumin-LSP-pectin particles after gastrointestinal digestion. The LSP-pectin complex produced microcapsules with higher solubility, smaller particle size, enhanced physicochemical stability, and increased bioaccessibility. Fourier transform infrared, circular dichroism spectra, and differential scanning calorimetry data indicated that the encapsulated curcumin interacted with LSP and pectin mainly through hydrogen bonding, hydrophobic, and electrostatic interactions. CONCLUSION This work shows that LSP can be an alternative encapsulant for the delivery of hydrophobic nutraceuticals with enhanced solubility, stability, and sustained release. The results may contribute to the design of novel food-grade delivery systems based on LSP vehicles, thereby broadening the applications of LSP in the fields of functional food. (c) 2021 Society of Chemical Industry.

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